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E-raamat: Multiculturalism, Dialectical Thought, and Social Justice Pedagogy

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This monograph assesses how students in a Latina/Latino Literature class began to think dialectically about social justice issues using various texts and Karl Marx's method. Students identified social justice issues, used relevant terminology, and realized their voices could help transform societal issues.



This monograph lays out a qualitative, collective case study designed to assess how students in a secondary Latina/Latino Literature class began to think dialectically about issues of social justice. By using various methods of data collection, I ascertained how the students’ thoughts and perceptions of Latinas/Latinos in this country changed over the course of the study. I introduced the students to both print and nonprint texts (e.g., news articles, documentary films) which, when presented through Karl Marx’s dialectical method, helped them see social justice issues, such as racism, poverty, and subjugation, more clearly and critically.

After analysis, several important themes emerged from the data: stereotyping and invisibility in the media, immigration, the notion of power, racism and discrimination, education, anger and frustration, and questioning. By the end of the Latina/Latino Literature class, all of the students in the study were able to identify particular social justice issues, explain the historical context which framed the current debates (e.g., immigration reform), and articulate their opinions of the issues. Each student participant started to use social justice terminology, which I introduced and used frequently in class (e.g., equity), and these words became a part of the students’ everyday vocabularies. Furthermore, by the completion of the class, the student participants began to realize that they had their own individual voices and could help transform societal issues in order to make the United States more equitable for all.

Foreword ix
PART I Contextualizing the Study
1 The Need for Dialectical Thought
3(14)
The State of U.S. Secondary Education in a Time of Neo-Liberalism
3(3)
Focus of the Study
6(2)
Creating a Latina/Latino Literature Class
8(2)
Dialectical Thought
10(2)
Social Justice
12(2)
Semantic Conventions
14(1)
Research Design
15(1)
Organization of the Book
15(1)
Notes
16(1)
2 The Latina/Latino Literature Curriculum
17(20)
School Context
18(1)
Student Participants
19(1)
Teaching Dialectical Thought
19(8)
Article Analysis of Marxist Themes
27(1)
Modeling of Dialectical Thinking
28(3)
Questioning for Dialectical Understanding
31(3)
Notes
34(3)
PART II Analyzing Participant Engagement With Dialectical Thought
3 Mia
37(8)
4 Catina
45(8)
5 Marco
53(8)
6 Isidora
61(8)
7 Alex
69(12)
PART III Further Analyses and Implications
8 What Does This All Mean?
81(20)
Stereotyping in the Media
81(2)
Immigration
83(1)
Power
84(2)
Racism and Discrimination
86(2)
Education
88(2)
Anger and Frustration
90(1)
Questioning
91(1)
Intertextuality
92(2)
Collective Intertextual Group Analysis
94(2)
Emerging Theory
96(3)
Summary
99(1)
Note
100(1)
9 The Larger Picture
101(8)
Limitations
105(1)
This Study's Contribution to Current Literature
106(1)
Where to Go From Here
107(2)
10 Personal Reflections
109(10)
Role of Researcher
109(2)
Methods of Soundness
111(1)
Subjectivity
112(1)
Final Reflection
113(6)
PART IV The Additional Bits
A Latina/Latino Literature Pre-Questionnaire
119(2)
Latina/Latino Literature Post-Questionnaire
119(2)
B The Latin Lover Commercial Analysis
121(2)
C Latina/Latino Literature: Commercial Analysis
123(4)
D Final Culminating Project
127(2)
References 129