Racial Literacies and Social Studies: Curriculum, Instruction, and Learning
This volume collects the work of historians, researchers, and classroom teachers to define what it means to be a racially literate educator and citizen. History classes should be spaces in which all students learn about their predecessors’ legacies as a context for understanding and decision-making in contemporary society. In reality, the historical experiences of people of color are additive at best or marginalized at worst. To address the complexities of teaching and learning about race in the history classroom, chapter authors answer a series of questions related to curriculum, instruction, student learning, and teacher education: (1) how U.S. history narratives and curricular frameworks can or do incorporate the histories of racial/immigrant groups, (2) how teachers in particular contexts enact instruction that promotes and/or impedes students’ racial literacy, (3) what students learn or don’t learn from race lessons in history, and (4) how teacher educators can educate the next generation of teachers to become racially literate. Readers can use this resource to enable all young people to acquire the knowledge, skills, and dispositions necessary to critique the nation’s legacy of racial inequality, as well as understand the historical movements to disrupt inequality.

Book Features:

  • Contributes new scholarship on teaching and learning about race, ethnicity, and immigration.
  • Draws on empirical studies about the cognitive and affective complexities of teaching about race in ethnically homogenous or heterogeneous K–12 classrooms.
  • Shows why the social studies classroom is the educative space to have deep and meaningful experiences in teaching about race and racism.
  • Organized in four sections that focus on curriculum, social studies instruction, student learning, and teacher learning.
1141124486
Racial Literacies and Social Studies: Curriculum, Instruction, and Learning
This volume collects the work of historians, researchers, and classroom teachers to define what it means to be a racially literate educator and citizen. History classes should be spaces in which all students learn about their predecessors’ legacies as a context for understanding and decision-making in contemporary society. In reality, the historical experiences of people of color are additive at best or marginalized at worst. To address the complexities of teaching and learning about race in the history classroom, chapter authors answer a series of questions related to curriculum, instruction, student learning, and teacher education: (1) how U.S. history narratives and curricular frameworks can or do incorporate the histories of racial/immigrant groups, (2) how teachers in particular contexts enact instruction that promotes and/or impedes students’ racial literacy, (3) what students learn or don’t learn from race lessons in history, and (4) how teacher educators can educate the next generation of teachers to become racially literate. Readers can use this resource to enable all young people to acquire the knowledge, skills, and dispositions necessary to critique the nation’s legacy of racial inequality, as well as understand the historical movements to disrupt inequality.

Book Features:

  • Contributes new scholarship on teaching and learning about race, ethnicity, and immigration.
  • Draws on empirical studies about the cognitive and affective complexities of teaching about race in ethnically homogenous or heterogeneous K–12 classrooms.
  • Shows why the social studies classroom is the educative space to have deep and meaningful experiences in teaching about race and racism.
  • Organized in four sections that focus on curriculum, social studies instruction, student learning, and teacher learning.
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Racial Literacies and Social Studies: Curriculum, Instruction, and Learning

Racial Literacies and Social Studies: Curriculum, Instruction, and Learning

Racial Literacies and Social Studies: Curriculum, Instruction, and Learning

Racial Literacies and Social Studies: Curriculum, Instruction, and Learning

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Overview

This volume collects the work of historians, researchers, and classroom teachers to define what it means to be a racially literate educator and citizen. History classes should be spaces in which all students learn about their predecessors’ legacies as a context for understanding and decision-making in contemporary society. In reality, the historical experiences of people of color are additive at best or marginalized at worst. To address the complexities of teaching and learning about race in the history classroom, chapter authors answer a series of questions related to curriculum, instruction, student learning, and teacher education: (1) how U.S. history narratives and curricular frameworks can or do incorporate the histories of racial/immigrant groups, (2) how teachers in particular contexts enact instruction that promotes and/or impedes students’ racial literacy, (3) what students learn or don’t learn from race lessons in history, and (4) how teacher educators can educate the next generation of teachers to become racially literate. Readers can use this resource to enable all young people to acquire the knowledge, skills, and dispositions necessary to critique the nation’s legacy of racial inequality, as well as understand the historical movements to disrupt inequality.

Book Features:

  • Contributes new scholarship on teaching and learning about race, ethnicity, and immigration.
  • Draws on empirical studies about the cognitive and affective complexities of teaching about race in ethnically homogenous or heterogeneous K–12 classrooms.
  • Shows why the social studies classroom is the educative space to have deep and meaningful experiences in teaching about race and racism.
  • Organized in four sections that focus on curriculum, social studies instruction, student learning, and teacher learning.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807766569
Publisher: Teachers College Press
Publication date: 10/28/2022
Series: Research and Practice in Social Studies Series
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

LaGarrett J. King is an associate professor of social studies education and director of the Center for K-12 Black History and Racial Literacy Education at the University at Buffalo Graduate School of Education. Dr. King received the 2022 National Council for the Social Studies Spirit of America Award.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Social Studies, All Things Race, and Racism LaGarrett King vii

Part I Racial Literacy and Curriculum

1 The COVID-19 Pandemic, Racial Literacy, and Asian Americans in the History Curriculum Sohyun An 3

2 "Movin' On Up": The Growing Role of Latinx Social Studies Topics Through the Grade Levels Maribel Santiago Eliana Castro 19

3 "It's Gonna Be My History": The Need for (Re)Indigenizing Curricular Literacies Christine Stanton 38

Part II Racial Literacy and Social Studies Instruction

4 Between the General and the Particular: Theoretical Tensions in Historical Consciousness and Racial Literacy for the Classroom Gabriel A. Reich 61

5 "We Gotta Make a Change": Developing Racial Literacy With Elementary Preservice Teachers Through Angie Thomas's The Hare U Give Noreen Naseem Rodríguez 74

Part III Racial Literacy and Student Learning

6 The National Curriculum of Whiteness Created by Our Public Spaces Karen L. B. Burgard 91

7 The Refusal to Learn: Inquiry Through Marronage in the History Classroom Tadashi Dozono 110

8 Racial Literacy and Historic Plantation Sites: A Tale of Two Plantations Kristen E. Duncan 125

9 Beyond Curricular Acknowledgment: Islam in the Classroom Natasha Hakimali Merchant 136

Part IV Racial Literacy and Teacher Learning

10 Developing Racial Literacy With White Social Studies Teachers: Reflections From a Critical Teacher Educator Tommy Ender 149

11 "You and Your Racist Friend": Programmatic Considerations for Building Racial Literacy Through Anti-Racist Teacher Education Andrea M. Hawkman 163

12 Learning to Teach History for Justice: Racial Literacies and Teacher Education Christopher C. Martell Kaylene M. Stevens 181

13 Knowing Is Not Enough, Action Is Required: Toward Racial Literacy and Activism in Teacher Development Tiffany Mitchell Patterson 195

14 I Stay Mad: A Black Woman Social Studies Educator's Fight to Be Seen, Heard, and Heeded Arcasia D. James-Gallaway 207

Notes 220

Index 222

About the Editor and the Contributors 229

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Racial Literacies and Social Studies is a call to action for teachers, school administrators, university faculty, and anyone committed to challenging power imbalances and racial hierarchies in schools and society. Edited by the country’s preeminent scholar on social studies and race, this book skillfully addresses intersectionalities of race and advances both research and praxis for a path forward toward an equitable world.”
Christine Woyshner, professor of education, Temple University


Racial Literacies and Social Studies provides a timely and insightful collection of essays that address many of the key issues impacting how we come to understand the durable grammar of race. The essays provide intellectual leadership that educators at all levels can draw from to inform their racial pedagogical content knowledge. Overall, this text is vital for encouraging us to both understand and act with regards to race and racism in order to arrive at a broader, more humanistic civic purpose.”
Christopher L. Busey, associate professor, University of Florida


Racial Literacies and Social Studies is a much-needed addition to the conversation about race at local, state, and national levels. Our curriculum, instruction, and profession depend upon developing racial literacy. This collection will help social studies educators and the broader community develop the necessary knowledge, language, and dispositions needed to identify and address racism in the past and present.”
Ryan D. New, K–12 instructional lead for social studies, Jefferson County Public Schools

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