Assessment practices in Higher Education remain beholden to the twin pillars of neoliberal economic orthodoxy and White supremacy. The former has given rise to the modularization and commodification of education, wherein student performance is measured according to narrow and often meaningless metrics that foster and maintain ineffective assessment mechanisms. The latter imbues those metrics with a deference to, and valorization of, "Whiteness" as a marker of success, and this manifests in persistent awarding gaps across the sector. Critical Race Theory elucidates the ways in which the "banking model" of education and assessment is implicated in a history of colonial oppression that underpins contemporary experiences of marginalization for racially minoritized students. Furthermore, the rapid proliferation of Artificial Intelligence programs is now throwing into sharp relief the fact that traditional forms of assessment are no longer functional even on their own flawed terms. The authors argue that, at this critical juncture, Anti-Racist assessment, which not only exposes and problematizes racism itself but also embeds formative feedback, drafting, collaboration, and creativity into assessment practices, offers a practical solution that can reconceptualize 'academic excellence' and help to identify and support a different kind of 'good student', reshaping the employability agenda as a force for good and reclaiming the democratizing potential of Higher Education.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fsoc.2023.972036 | DOI Listing |
J Gen Intern Med
December 2024
Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
Background: Structured faculty development programs focused on integrating health equity into medical education curricula remain limited.
Aim: To describe an interdisciplinary faculty development program grounded in adult learning theory and to assess its impact on participants' professional growth.
Setting And Participants: Twenty-one faculty members across six academic-affiliated health systems.
Integr Med Rep
July 2024
Department of Biology, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Context: Students of color in the United States experience elevated stress across the entire spectrum of education, spanning from early stages of K-12 to the more advanced stages of postgraduate studies. This sustained state of chronic stress decreases learning and curtails opportunities, especially in science, technology, engineering, and math (ST EM) fields, where stress levels are considered exceptionally high. Mindfulness-based practices such as MBSR have a proven effective for stress reduction in college students.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychiatry Res
September 2024
School of Psychology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; Interdisciplinary Centre for Black Health, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
This article addresses gaps in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) when it comes to integrating racial issues that affect racialized patients' mental health. Traditional adaptations of CBT focused on social, religious, and linguistic challenges but neglected the critical aspects of interpersonal, institutional and systemic racism, internalized racism and complex racial trauma. This oversight has resulted in less effective outcomes for racialized individuals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMedEdPORTAL
July 2024
Associate Professor, Department of Family Medicine, and Senior Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity, Inclusion & Belonging, Georgetown University School of Medicine.
Introduction: Medical schools seeking to correct and reform curricula towards anti-racist perspectives need to address anti-Black forms of racism specifically and teach students critical upstander skills to interrupt manifestations of racism. We developed a course to teach preclinical medical students basic anti-racism competencies including recognition and awareness of anti-Black racism in medicine and upstander skills to advocate for patients and colleagues.
Methods: In 2021 and 2022, we designed, implemented, and evaluated an elective course for second-year medical students ( = 149) to introduce competencies of anti-racism focusing on upstander skills for addressing anti-Blackness.
Subst Use Misuse
November 2024
Professor, Graduate School of Professional Psychology, University of Denver.
Objective: This commentary seeks to evaluate existing knowledge about the relationship between brain injury (BI) and overdose (OD), to unify distant bodies of literature, and to enhance prevention and treatment for opioid OD among individuals with BI.
Background: There is a hidden epidemic of undiagnosed BI in the United States. Due to lack of screening, the vast majority of BI sufferers do not know they have a BI.
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