Learning lab as a utopian methodology for future making: Decolonizing knowledge production toward racial justice in school discipline

Click on the DOI to access this article (may not be free). Students from minoritized communities in US public schools face harsher exclusionary discipline, leading to negative academic, social, and emotional outcomes. Racial disproportionality in school discipline is a critical inequity that require...

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Published in:Mind, Culture, and Activity
Main Authors: Ko, Dosun, Bal, Aydin, Bird Bear, Aaron, Orie, Linda, Mawene, Dian
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Routledge 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1080/10749039.2023.2205391
https://soar.wichita.edu/handle/10057/25330
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author Ko, Dosun
Bal, Aydin
Bird Bear, Aaron
Orie, Linda
Mawene, Dian
author_facet Ko, Dosun
Bal, Aydin
Bird Bear, Aaron
Orie, Linda
Mawene, Dian
author_sort Ko, Dosun
collection Wichita State University: SOAR (Shocker Open Access Repository)
container_issue 1
container_start_page 5
container_title Mind, Culture, and Activity
container_volume 30
description Click on the DOI to access this article (may not be free). Students from minoritized communities in US public schools face harsher exclusionary discipline, leading to negative academic, social, and emotional outcomes. Racial disproportionality in school discipline is a critical inequity that requires ecologically valid solutions with local stakeholders. The Indigenous Learning Lab (ILL) was implemented to address racial disproportionality that American Indian students experience at a rural high school serving a band of an Anishinaabe nation in the United States. ILL is an inclusive systemic design process informed by cultural historical activity theory and decolonizing methodology. This study explores how ILL facilitated local stakeholders' utopian future-making by means of Ruth Levitas's (2013) three modes of utopian methodology - utopia as archeology, architecture, and ontological becoming - to dismantle an oppressive settler-colonial school discipline system.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
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language English
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.1080/10749039.2023.2205391
op_relation Mind, Culture, and Activity
2023
Dosun Ko, Aydin Bal, Aaron Bird Bear, Linda Orie & Dian Mawene (2023) Learning lab as a utopian methodology for future making: decolonizing knowledge production toward racial justice in school discipline, Mind, Culture, and Activity, DOI:10.1080/10749039.2023.2205391
https://doi.org/10.1080/10749039.2023.2205391
https://soar.wichita.edu/handle/10057/25330
op_rights © 2023 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
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publisher Routledge
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spelling ftwichitau:oai:https://soar.wichita.edu:10057/25330 2025-04-13T14:07:04+00:00 Learning lab as a utopian methodology for future making: Decolonizing knowledge production toward racial justice in school discipline Ko, Dosun Bal, Aydin Bird Bear, Aaron Orie, Linda Mawene, Dian 2023-05-02 https://doi.org/10.1080/10749039.2023.2205391 https://soar.wichita.edu/handle/10057/25330 en_US eng Routledge Mind, Culture, and Activity 2023 Dosun Ko, Aydin Bal, Aaron Bird Bear, Linda Orie & Dian Mawene (2023) Learning lab as a utopian methodology for future making: decolonizing knowledge production toward racial justice in school discipline, Mind, Culture, and Activity, DOI:10.1080/10749039.2023.2205391 https://doi.org/10.1080/10749039.2023.2205391 https://soar.wichita.edu/handle/10057/25330 © 2023 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. Racial justice Knowledge production Education Anishinaabe Article 2023 ftwichitau https://doi.org/10.1080/10749039.2023.2205391 2025-03-14T04:29:02Z Click on the DOI to access this article (may not be free). Students from minoritized communities in US public schools face harsher exclusionary discipline, leading to negative academic, social, and emotional outcomes. Racial disproportionality in school discipline is a critical inequity that requires ecologically valid solutions with local stakeholders. The Indigenous Learning Lab (ILL) was implemented to address racial disproportionality that American Indian students experience at a rural high school serving a band of an Anishinaabe nation in the United States. ILL is an inclusive systemic design process informed by cultural historical activity theory and decolonizing methodology. This study explores how ILL facilitated local stakeholders' utopian future-making by means of Ruth Levitas's (2013) three modes of utopian methodology - utopia as archeology, architecture, and ontological becoming - to dismantle an oppressive settler-colonial school discipline system. Article in Journal/Newspaper anishina* Wichita State University: SOAR (Shocker Open Access Repository) Indian Mind, Culture, and Activity 30 1 5 23
spellingShingle Racial justice
Knowledge production
Education
Anishinaabe
Ko, Dosun
Bal, Aydin
Bird Bear, Aaron
Orie, Linda
Mawene, Dian
Learning lab as a utopian methodology for future making: Decolonizing knowledge production toward racial justice in school discipline
title Learning lab as a utopian methodology for future making: Decolonizing knowledge production toward racial justice in school discipline
title_full Learning lab as a utopian methodology for future making: Decolonizing knowledge production toward racial justice in school discipline
title_fullStr Learning lab as a utopian methodology for future making: Decolonizing knowledge production toward racial justice in school discipline
title_full_unstemmed Learning lab as a utopian methodology for future making: Decolonizing knowledge production toward racial justice in school discipline
title_short Learning lab as a utopian methodology for future making: Decolonizing knowledge production toward racial justice in school discipline
title_sort learning lab as a utopian methodology for future making: decolonizing knowledge production toward racial justice in school discipline
topic Racial justice
Knowledge production
Education
Anishinaabe
topic_facet Racial justice
Knowledge production
Education
Anishinaabe
url https://doi.org/10.1080/10749039.2023.2205391
https://soar.wichita.edu/handle/10057/25330