Jenna Chandler-Ward and Elizabeth Denevi share how white educators can gain greater consciousness of their own white racial identity and rethink pedagogical approaches.
Elizabeth Denevi is an educator, diversity consultant, and cofounder of the popular professional development site Teaching While White. As Director of the Eastern Educational Resource Collaborative, Dr. Denevi has worked with educational institutions across the country to promote equity and diversity pedagogy. She is also an Assistant Professor at the Lewis and Clark Graduate School of Education and Counseling. She lives in Portland, Oregon.
Jenna Chandler-Ward is an educator, diversity consultant, and cofounder of the popular professional development site Teaching While White. With over two decades of experience, she has been an educator in non-profits, schools, and colleges working with students from kindergarten to adult learners. Jenna was also a founder and co-director of the Multicultural Teaching Institute, which produces workshops and a conference for educators on issues of equity and inclusion. She lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Foreword by Howard C. Stevenson
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I
Preparing for Action-Reflection, Reframing, and New Understandings
1 Foggy Mirrors
2 Talking About Race Means Talking About Whiteness
3 Analyzing How Whiteness Operates as a System in Our Schools
Part II
Steps for Action-Antiracist Strategies for Educational Communities
4 Locating Ourselves Within Whiteness
5 Rooting and Shifting: Rethinking Pedagogical Approaches and Curricular Topics
6 Assessment and Feedback
7 Developing an Antiracist Leadership Practice
8 The Role of White Parents in the Pursuit of Racial Literacy and Equity
Afterword
Appendix A: The Costs of Racism to White People
Appendix B: White Antiracist Activists
Appendix C: Cycle of Oppression