Faculty of Education Major Research Papers
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Collection consists of Major Research Papers (MRP) produced by students in the Graduate Program in Education.
This collection is managed by the Graduate Program.
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Item Open Access Analysis of Representation in Children's Picture Books(2019-08) Khokhar, Rabia; Norquay, NaomiMy Major Research Paper is an analysis of representation in children’s picture books with a social justice lens. I explore the categories of race, gender and religion which can be seen as social difference markers. I critically analyze 10-15 picture books in each category through content analysis and a critical checklist made through a social justice lens. The goal of my research is to ascertain the messages within the books to see how these social difference markers are represented. In an elementary classroom, picture books are a form of socialization and method of transmitting societal norms and values. My research analyzes and disrupts the idea of teaching as a neutral profession by demonstrating that teaching is political. It also provides insight into how social justice minded teachers can disrupt the managed curriculum when they critically think about the picture books they are sharing with their students.Item Open Access A Course of Becoming: Autobiography, Knowledge, Memory and (Re) Constructing Identity(2015-08-31) Castillo, John; Crichlow, WarrenThis major research paper will examine the concept of Toward a Course of Becoming: Autobiography, Knowledge, Memory and (Re) Constructing Identity. Throughout the discussion, significant considerations into possible contributions of William Pinar’s (1975) Currere Method (regressive, progressive, analytical, and synthetical) juxtaposed against Stuart Hall’s theory on Identity will further substantiate my discourse. In addition to Pinar and Hall, autobiographical writing will reflect on American Civil Rights Activist Frederick Douglass’ autobiography Narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass: An American Slave written by Himself (1845). Canada’s first Black Member of Parliament, Cabinet Minister and Lieutenant- Governor of Ontario; Lincoln M. Alexander’s Go to School, You’re a little black boy (2010) will also focus my discussion on conceptualizing autobiography, knowledge, memory and their interrelationships within the framework of (re) constructing identity. The main aim of this analysis is to derive a sense of the autobiographical course run by the Caribbean (migrant) subject constructing and re-constructing senses of identity, belonging, being, and becoming. The intention of the research is to indicate the potential contribution of specifically Caribbean and African descent, (im) migrant North American autographical experience to the currere approach to curriculum understanding.Item Open Access Educating from Difference: Black Cultural Art Educators' Perspectives with Culturally Responsive Teaching(2020-08) Murray, Collette; James, Carl E.The 2009 Ontario Ministry of Education’s Equity Action plan called for school boards to implement culturally relevant teaching in their strategic plans. As senior administration and educators work towards inclusive classrooms, a perspective that remains absent is that of the arts educator and their relationship to culturally responsive pedagogy. This qualitative study uses Critical Race Theory to examine the work and experiences—including the successes and challenges—of Cultural Art Educators using African diasporic artforms. The narratives from semi-structured interviews with eight Black Canadian artists, uncover that while successes occur, cultural art educators navigate the politics of institutional unpreparedness, Anti-Black racism, delegitimization of their cultural artistry and cultural appropriation. Institutional recommendations are made to understand the artists’ role, improve the working relationship and recognize Black art content supporting a Canadian education mandate. This is a valuable contribution to the topic of cultural relevance that counters the historical exclusion of race-based data of artists involved in education.Item Open Access Item Open Access The Gospel Choir: Community in Motion(2015-08-17) Burke, Karen; Manette, JoyItem Open Access Hear My Voice- A Research Project on Youth Needs in the Jane and Finch Community(2017-04-19) Skeete, Krystle; Dippo, DonThis research paper explores the current research on urban youth needs, and ways in which youth workers can develop and employ strategies to engage marginalized youth. The purposes of this study is to gain insight on the needs, challenges, and benefits of youth engagement for youth living in the suburban/urban Jane and Finch community, and explore youth knowledge of available resources and services to them in the community. In addition, this paper will give youth service organizations/ youth workers the opportunity to provide insight into the challenges and needs working with young people in the community. The findings from this study confirm that there is a significant amount of young people who are unaware of the resources available to them, and there are many challenges to service providers to reach and offer quality services to young people in the community.Item Open Access How Armenian Syrian Millennial Refugees use Social Media to Facilitate Integration into Canadian Society(2018-07) Racco, Alyssa; Schecter, Sandra R.Using a conceptual framework that builds on the constructs of community of practice (Homles & Meyerhoff, 1990; Lave & Wenger 1998; Wenger 1998) and superdiversity (Blommaert, 2013; Blommaert & Rampton, 2012; Jørgensen, Karrebæk, Madsen, & Møller, 2011; Vertovec, 2007), this study reports on the ways Armenian Syrian millennial refugees access information via social media. Findings are based on data collected through participant observations, interviews and survey protocols. The study showed the use of semiotic resources as social media allowed respondents to extend the social implicatures of language beyond their verbal proficiency levels.Item Open Access How Do Three Immigrant Women From Former Yugoslavia Perceive the Role of Accent in Intelligibility and Comprehensibility in the Canadian Workplace?(2017-05-10) Vujinovic, Sanja; Ippolito, JohnRecent trends in language instruction have begun to shift away from achieving a native-like accent and towards a focus on intelligibly and comprehensibility. However, a subset of learners continues to feel discriminated against due to their perceived foreign accents. This may be a result of a listener bias towards familiar accents. Learners may feel the pressure to adhere to a native-like linguistic fluency that is nearly impossible for some to achieve. The following ethnographic feminist study examines the impact of perceived foreign accent on the professional career of adult immigrant women in a Canadian context. The study is ethnographic in that it centres around three adult immigrant women and their challenges in acquiring English as an additional language in Canada. It is feminist to the extent that it gives a voice to the women being studied, as well as taking a qualitative approach to exploring their stories. Interviews are used to create a narrative of the experiences that the participants have undergone since their arrival to Canada. The study addresses the question, how do three immigrant women from former Yugoslavia perceive the role of accent in intelligibility and comprehensibility in the Canadian workplace?Item Open Access The Impact of Bias Present in High School Science Textbooks(2017-07-15) Poredi, Sanika; Farley, LisaItem Open Access Indigenous Education, Mino-Bimaadiziwin, and the Fostering of Relational Space Through Indigenous Pedagogy(2015-08-27) Hupfield, John; Dion, SusanThis paper examines the varying impacts of Indigenous pedagogy and formal schooling on the learning path of the author. It focuses on the historical context of residential schools, the Indian Control of Indian Education paper of 1972, and the shifting control of schools to Indigenous communities. With a resulting increase in Indigenous administration, staff, and curricula, the time is opportune for discourse on Indigenous pedagogy to come to the fore. The author utilizes personal relationships with mentors, learning experiences in and outside of schools, and the process of learning regalia construction to identify their contributions towards Anishinaabe mino-bimaadiziwin, the good life. The self-reflective examination documents their journey of coming to know Indigenous pedagogy as Anishinaabe.Item Open Access An Inquiry Into the Journey of Three Canadian Women in Physics and Stem(2017-09-22) Cole, Lisa Sung-Ae; Alsop, SteveThe under representation of women in the fields of Physics and STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) was investigated through a semi-autobiographical approach. This study follows the reflection of one educator and the narratives of two former female students who have chosen to pursue post-secondary studies in STEM. The narratives reveal that personal experiences influences an educator’s professional practice and these practices can shape a student’s classroom experience that may influence the development of a student’s interests and possible future outcomes in pursuing a STEM career. Students reveal that real world examples, experiences with hands on learning, collaborative group learning, and connecting to STEM professionals and visiting facilities helped to inspire their own educational journey.Item Open Access Internationalization and Changing Student Demographic: How Ethno-Racial Clubs Help Shape and Navigate the Student Experience on Canadian University Campuses(2015-08-21) Gangbar, Samuel; Trilokekar, RoopaAs globalization continues to make the world a smaller place, and the internationalization of higher education brings immigrant, international and domestic students closer together within post-secondary institutions, ethno-racial clubs have increasingly emerged on Canadian campuses. York University, for example, houses over 65 ethno-racial clubs, which provide both socio-cultural and psychological supports for students of diverse backgrounds. These ethno-racial clubs can be defined as “safe spaces” (Gee 2004) on campus where diverse students can embrace their ethnicity, cultures and backgrounds. These clubs may also serve as space to foster student engagement, intercultural dialogue, and international perspectives. This research proposes to contextualize the role and functions of ethno-racial clubs in an increasingly diverse university environment by conducting a case study of York University. Through interviews with two students from the Chinese Culture Club and the Ukrainian Students’ Associations, both clubs that represent a large and organized student membership on the York campus, this study will provide critical insights and perspectives on how ethnoracial clubs engage students around questions of self-affiliation. This research aims to broaden discussion on how post-secondary institutions are internationalizing, and how students are affected by internationalization and how they (re) envision their place on campus as a result of these efforts.Item Open Access Lend Me Your Ear: The Voice of Early African Canadian Communities in Ontario Through Petitions(2016-01-26) Henry, Natasha; James, CarlThe inclusion of Black history in Ontario classrooms remains relatively marginalized and stagnant after thirty years of advocacy on the part of educators, groups and individuals in Black communities, and scholars to make the curriculum more inclusive of the Black experience in Canada and across the Diaspora. This Major Research Project investigates the current state of the teaching of African Canadian history in elementary and secondary public schools, to understand why it has remained virtually unchanged for decades despite gains in policy revision: the strong emphasis on American content, confinement to Black History Month in February. It also examines the impact of such systemic exclusion and marginalization of Black history on both Black and non-Black students.Item Open Access Minor International Students in Canada: Does the Legal Framework Matter?(2016-12-16) Mockute, Diana; Trilokekar, RoopaAs Federal and provincial governments invest to “ help secure Canada’s long – term prosperity and economic success” (DFATD, 2014; Scott et al. 2015) through increased international student recruitment and retention, there is a steady increase in international student numbers with a proportionate increase in international students under age of 18. This MRP examines the implication of this growth particular among minor international students (18 and younger) in a policy context in Canada where there is contradiction between provincial age of majority regulations and no requirement for guardianship for incoming minor international students. Unlike Canada two other jurisdictions, namely Australia’s and the UK’s which have also invested in increasing international students numbers, have established frameworks to ensure the safeguarding of international minors. This MRP will offer a comparative lens to examine frameworks in three jurisdictions with reference to minor international students and provide recommendations for Canadian regulatory framework. The legal protection of international students minors is a human rights issue with ethical implications for the Canadian government and institutions that are equally invested in recruiting international students. Thus this study recommends Canada must take responsibility in aligning federal immigration and legal provincial systems to better protect minor international students. These actions are necessary to protect Canada’s reputation, and ensure that the immigration of international students will continue to grow in Canada.Item Open Access Negotiating Fragments: Implications of the Diasporic Consciousness on Teaching and Learning(2017-02-10) Kassam, Salima; Yon, DanThis paper aims to consider how the diasporic consciousness can be taken up in schooling as a construct that challenges multicultural and anti-racism frameworks. It looks at notions of identity and identities as fluid constructs that are contested, navigated and challenged as we consider student connections to their multiple narratives and journeys. In considering how the theory of diaspora plays out in classroom structures, we can envision how the curriculum can be used to open up spaces for this process to take place. Through connecting theory to practice in this paper, I hope to create a conversation for the possibilities of pushing teaching and learning beyond static constructs as we think about how all students can enact who they are becoming beyond the margins of conventional practice.Item Open Access On Blackness and Boyhood: Exploring the Educational and Emotional Lives of Somali Male Youth(2022-03) Ahmed, Suad Hassan; Farley, LisaWhile there is a shortage of literature addressing the educational experiences of Somali-speaking students at present, the research that does exist reveals that students of Somali descent show low educational attainment and some of the highest drop-out rates of any minority group within the Toronto District School Board (TDSB). My research aims to explore this exact phenomenon by looking to the educational and emotional experiences of boy students who are of Somali descent, and who have at some point during their education been suspended, expelled, and/or labeled as at-risk for academic, emotional, and/or behavioral issues. My goal is to examine how male Somali students represent, understand, and navigate their understandings of education in the context of their experiences of expulsion, segregation, and/or exclusion at school. My study uses in-depth, semi-structured interviews that will draw on both visual and narrative methodologies. Drawing from critical childhood studies, I propose to incorporate visual representation (i.e., drawing) as a way to accompany and deepen my understanding of participants’ experiences that are sometimes not easily captured in language alone (Luttrell, 2020). All told, my aims are to gain insight into the ways that Black boys understand and conceptualize a school structure that has historically marginalized them and continues to, and the ways that they remain actively and imaginatively engaged in their own world-making. Overall, this study aims to contribute to existing literature on institutionalized racism within the education system, and it particularly aims to pose relevant implications for topics emerging from the field of postcolonial psychoanalysis. This study is also the first of its kind in that it foregrounds the emotional lives of Somali youth as they lived within social structures of racism.Item Open Access Recruitment and Retention of Somali Female Students Accessing Higher Education in Dadaab, Kenya(2017-08-01) Sabriye, Hawa; Dippo, DonThis paper examines the experiences of five Somali refugee women living and participating in higher education programs in Dadaab, Kenya with a particular focus on centering their narratives. Through exploring the different factors impacting the recruitment and retention of women in higher education in a refugee higher education context, this paper seeks to present participants’ autonomy and ownership of their lived experiences and stories. Drawing from the perspectives of these five women who were interviewed, this paper argues that the access and participation of Somali refugee women in higher education are influenced by several key factors that cannot be limited to culture, religion and being a refugee. The presented narratives will counter conventional discourse from the global north through showcasing their lived experiences and perceptions - thus this is a qualitative study and their shared narratives need to be understood as their own and not representative of all Somali female refugees living in Dadaab.Item Open Access The Role of Peer Interaction and Second Language Learning for ESL Students in Academic Contexts: An Extended Literature Review(2016-04-03) Tavares, Vander; Valeo, AntonellaThis literature review explores the relationship between language proficiency and ESL students’ experiences in higher education contexts, with specific reference to the role of conversational peer interaction. The two major concerns that guide this review are (a) the academic challenges faced by students from an ESL background in relation to conversational interaction, and (b) the impact of conversational language proficiency on their overall academic experience. The studies reviewed in this project suggest that insufficient language proficiency results in several challenges for ESL students, most notably the inability to share their expertise and knowledge with their peers and participate successfully in classroom oral discussions. In addition, however, the literature suggests that language proficiency has a strong impact on the overall experiences of students and their abilities to navigate the social structures of the academic community and establish their own identity.Item Open Access Self-Advocacy as a Goal for Education(2015-08-19) Choi, Eugenie; Israelite, NeitaThis research project reviews selected literature on self-advocacy instruction to highlight (a) its importance as a focus for education and (b) the barriers towards its implementation. Several studies have recognized that the transition from high school to PSE presents a series of challenges for students with disabilities (e.g., Madaus, 2005; Eckes & Ochoa, 2005). Results of research, however, associate self-advocacy skills with better transitions into PSE and adult life by students with disabilities (Norton, 1997; Roessler, Brown, & Rumrill; 1998; Satcher, 1995). A salient barrier towards self-advocacy education is a lack of sufficient training in preservice education. This paper concludes with recommendations for the development of such training and implications for educational research.Item Open Access Silent Voices: "South Asian" Mothers and Transition to High School, A Decolonizing Institutional Ethnography of Mothering Work(2015-09-22) Karnad-Jani, Rashmee; Haig-Brown, CeliaIn the province of Ontario, the Ministry of Education uses its regulatory texts to govern transition related activities for students preparing for high school. Deadlines set out by schools and school boards arise from the transition policies and procedures of the Ministry of Education. During the Grade 8 year, administrators, teachers and parents of high school bound students do the transition work required to support the goals and deadlines laid out in these texts. Through in-depth interviews in participants’ heritage languages, textual analysis, and personal reflections, I have conducted a decolonizing institutional ethnography of mothering work conducted by “South Asian” mothers. I have explored in-depth the question: How does the institution, a large school board in the Greater Toronto Area, within the province of Ontario, use one important regulatory text, the regional course directory or RCD, to coordinate the work of “South Asian” mothers as they prepare for their children’s transition to high school?