Affiliation:
1. Division of Social, Behavioral, and Human Sciences University of Washington Tacoma Washington USA
Abstract
AbstractIn the winter and spring of 2021, I—a White, female, graduate student—taught a six‐month course surrounding the theme: Disrupting Systemic Racism at our University Through Action Research. I was challenged to lead a meaningful course in a two‐dimensional virtual space, amidst rising death tolls of the COVID‐19 pandemic and the rhythmic beat of calls for racial justice pulsing through our Zoom class periods. This experience opened my eyes as an educator, budding community psychologist, and an antiracist White accomplice. In this critical autoethnographic case study, I recount my experience adapting the community organizing principle of fractals into a pedagogical framework that guided my instructional practices in a community psychology course. In doing so, I echo the call for community psychologists to connect our work more tightly to Black, Indigenous, and people of Color social justice organizers and movements to fortify the field's relevance in the struggle for racial justice.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Applied Psychology,Health (social science)
Reference60 articles.
1. ‘We were at our journey's end’: Settler sovereignty formation in Oregon;Barber K.;Oregon Historical Quarterly,2019
2. Black Freedom Beyond Border: Memories of Abolition Day. (2020). Wakanda Dream Lab X Policy Link.