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Race-evasive frames in physics and physics education: Results from an interview study

Publication ,  Journal Article
Robertson, AD; Vélez, V; Hairston, WT; Bonilla-Silva, E
Published in: Physical Review Physics Education Research
January 1, 2023

Mainstream physics teaching and learning produces material outcomes that, when analyzed through the lens of Critical Race Theory, point to white supremacy, or "the systemic maintenance of the dominant position that produces white privilege"(Battey & Levya, 2016). In particular, the continued, extreme underrepresentation of People of Color in physics and a growing number of first-person accounts of the harm that People of Color experience in physics classrooms and departments speak to a system that valorizes whiteness and marginalizes People of Color. If we take Critical Race Theory as a lens, we expect that maintaining white supremacy in physics happens in part via discipline-specific instantiations of broader mechanisms that reproduce whiteness. In this study, we illustrate one such mechanism: race evasiveness, a powerful ideology that uses race-neutral discourse to explain away racialized phenomena, evading race as a shaping force in social phenomena. We offer examples from interviews with twelve university physics faculty, showing what race-evasive discourses can look like in physics and how physics epistemologies, discourses, and stories reify race-evasive frames. This work aims to support faculty in refusing race evasiveness in physics teaching and learning, toward developing race-conscious analyses that can help us challenge white supremacy in our discipline.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Physical Review Physics Education Research

DOI

EISSN

2469-9896

Publication Date

January 1, 2023

Volume

19

Issue

1

Related Subject Headings

  • 3901 Curriculum and pedagogy
 

Citation

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Robertson, A. D., Vélez, V., Hairston, W. T., & Bonilla-Silva, E. (2023). Race-evasive frames in physics and physics education: Results from an interview study. Physical Review Physics Education Research, 19(1). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.19.010115
Robertson, A. D., V. Vélez, W. T. Hairston, and E. Bonilla-Silva. “Race-evasive frames in physics and physics education: Results from an interview study.” Physical Review Physics Education Research 19, no. 1 (January 1, 2023). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.19.010115.
Robertson AD, Vélez V, Hairston WT, Bonilla-Silva E. Race-evasive frames in physics and physics education: Results from an interview study. Physical Review Physics Education Research. 2023 Jan 1;19(1).
Robertson, A. D., et al. “Race-evasive frames in physics and physics education: Results from an interview study.” Physical Review Physics Education Research, vol. 19, no. 1, Jan. 2023. Scopus, doi:10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.19.010115.
Robertson AD, Vélez V, Hairston WT, Bonilla-Silva E. Race-evasive frames in physics and physics education: Results from an interview study. Physical Review Physics Education Research. 2023 Jan 1;19(1).

Published In

Physical Review Physics Education Research

DOI

EISSN

2469-9896

Publication Date

January 1, 2023

Volume

19

Issue

1

Related Subject Headings

  • 3901 Curriculum and pedagogy