CFE 640 – Inequality and Intergroup Relations in Education

Professor: Gretchen Lopez

This course examines theory, research, and practice important for intergroup relations in education, within the context of racial, ethnic, and class inequalities in broader U.S. society.

The 60th anniversary of Brown vs. Board of Education, and recent court cases reviewing affirmative action and integration policies, have focused attention on social science research that re-examines and supports the need for, and broader impact of, racial and ethnic diversity across levels of education. In this course, students will critically engage examples from this growing body of research, including work on:

  • Racial, ethnic, and class inequalities in the U.S.; current patterns of re-segregation across educational settings and geographic regions, for educators as well as students; and consequences for educational access, opportunity, and outcomes
  • Contemporary forms of racism; associated ideologies and systems of power and privilege; multi-level processes of discrimination and stereotyping in education
  • Students’ interpretations and constructions of their educational experiences, including alienation, struggle, and resistance
  • Reflections, understandings, and stories of learning across difference from students, educators, researchers, and community groups
  • Effects of intergroup contact for a broad range of outcomes including more positive intergroup attitudes and emotions, and support for policies addressing inequality
  • Critical conditions for intergroup contact in educational settings, for academic as well as democratic outcomes
  • Impact of specific pedagogical practices and related processes including social justice education, multicultural education, feminist pedagogy, and intergroup dialogue
  • Applying practices and results from higher education to an understanding of programs, processes, and change in community settings.

The primary focus during the current semester will be on race and ethnicity including intersections with class and gender. Students are invited to apply the theory, research, and practice under study to additional group inequalities, intersections, and related intergroup relations in education.