IMPACT: The Journal of the Center for Interdisciplinary Teaching and Learning. Volume 11, Issue 1, Winter 2022
Date Issued
2022-02Author(s)
Boots, Cheryl C.
Dunlavy, Jean
Dutta, Suchismita
Goldman, Sasha B.
Opdycke, Kelly
Uy, Phitsamay S.
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https://hdl.handle.net/2144/44046Citation (published version)
IMPACT 11(1), Winter 2022. Boston University College of General StudiesAbstract
This special issue of the journal is devoted to creating antiracist classrooms through interdisciplinary teaching, learning, curriculum, and leadership. The essays in this special issue explore a variety of issues related to doing the work—both personally and in the curriculum—of creating antiracist classrooms and universities.
Indeed, the first essay of this special issue details the author’s thinking about and experiences with constructing a 21-
day programmatic approach that offered structured learning along with accountability measures for graduate students,
staff, and faculty at Boston University who were interested in unlearning racism and learning antiracism. After cautioning
readers that antiracist efforts run the risk of being molded by neoliberal racist academia, the second essay explores how
contingent faculty might be impacted in unique ways compared to their more secure counterparts when those faculty
teach antiracist curriculum without institutional support to do this work. In light of the fact that Critical Race Theory (CRT)
has been publicly debated and even banned in some places in the American education system, the third essay argues
that successfully curating and teaching an antiracist curriculum cannot be done without properly understanding the value
of CRT in teacher education. It also offers an example assignment for an antiracist composition and rhetoric curriculum as
well as the author’s experience participating in an antiracist reading group for faculty at her university. The fourth and final
essay explores intersectionality in both a case study of and interview with Dr. Carmen Twillie Ambar, an African-American
woman who has successfully advanced through successive layers of academic positions in public and private institutions to become the president at two different American liberal arts colleges. Detailing Dr. Ambar’s emphasis on personal
integrity and concern about historically disadvantaged student groups, it also explores her philosophy and varied experiences as a woman leader in academia. Additionally, this essay details the five foci of Dr. Ambar’s Presidential Initiative at
Oberlin, which offer a heuristic model for other organizations doing antiracist work at universities.
Our Impact book reviews explore texts that address antiracist classroom strategies. Both reviewers examine books initially written for K-12 educators, but show how these books can serve all educators in their classrooms, including university
educators. Our first reviewer details an author’s practical guide to class discussions about race that also offers guidance
for more effective classroom experiences. Our second reviewer explores an author’s call to decenter whiteness in schools
both by helping their teacher candidates understand their racism and oppression as part of their teacher development
training and by offering concrete strategies to disrupt the focus on whiteness in curriculum and curricular decisions. By
offering these two windows into anti-racist curricula and practices for younger learners, we suggest that post-secondary
educators also can deepen their understanding of some incoming students’ experiences and expectations regarding antiracism in their classrooms.
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