4.3 Article

Disrupting Racism and Whiteness in Researching a Science of Reading

Journal

READING RESEARCH QUARTERLY
Volume 55, Issue -, Pages S249-S253

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/rrq.347

Keywords

Methodological perspectives; Comprehension; Teacher education; professional development; Critical Race Theory; Theories; Critical Theory; Teacher Preparation; Social Class; Research methodology; Multicultural Literature; Ethnography; Interviews; Qualitative Research; Video; Audio Transcript Analysis; 6-Adult; 3-Early adolescence; 5-College; university

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The author poses racialized questions and issues about the science of reading to address and disrupt implicit and overt racist practices in producing and disseminating knowledge. Roles, complexities, nuances, and challenges related to racial identity, special education lenses, and motivation are explored to reimagine how we conceptualize, construct, and build knowledge about the science of reading. Drawing from critical theories in education, the multicultural education movement, and a developing conceptual framework that the author calls disruptive movement to advance a racial justice agenda in the science of reading, the author questions who builds knowledge, what counts as knowledge, and why knowledge is constructed in the science of reading.

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