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Dive into the research topics where Ebony Elizabeth Thomas is active.

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Featured researches published by Ebony Elizabeth Thomas.


Journal of Teacher Education | 2013

Examining Studies of Inquiry-Based Learning in Three Fields of Education: Sparking Generative Conversation.

Brett L. M. Levy; Ebony Elizabeth Thomas; Kathryn Drago; Lesley A. Rex

Many educational researchers across the United States have found that inquiry-based learning (IBL) supports the development of deep, meaningful content knowledge. However, integrating IBL into classroom practice has been challenging, in part because of contrasting conceptualizations and practices across educational fields. In this article, we (a) describe differing conceptions of IBL, (b) summarize our own studies of IBL in three fields of education, (c) compare and contrast the processes and purposes of IBL in our studies and fields, and (d) suggest numerous opportunities for cross-disciplinary collaborations on IBL curriculum, teaching, and research that could bolster its inclusion in K-12 education. We ground our exploration in knowledge-generating conceptualizations and practices in these fields.


Harvard Educational Review | 2016

Restorying the Self: Bending Toward Textual Justice

Ebony Elizabeth Thomas; Amy Stornaiuolo

In this essay, Ebony Elizabeth Thomas and Amy Stornaiuolo explore new trends in reader response for a digital age, particularly the phenomenon of bending texts using social media. They argue that bending is one form of restorying, a process by which people reshape narratives to represent a diversity of perspectives and experiences that are often missing or silenced in mainstream texts, media, and popular discourse. Building on Louise Rosenblatts influential transactional theory of reading, the authors theorize restorying as a participatory textual practice in which young people use new media tools to inscribe themselves into existence. The authors build on theorists from Mikhail Bakthin to Noliwe Rooks in order to illustrate tensions between individualistic “ideological becoming” and critical reader response as a means of protest. After discussing six forms of restorying, they focus on bending as one way youth make manifest their embodied, lived realities and identities, providing examples from sites of ...


Qualitative Inquiry | 2012

“If You Weren’t Researching Me and a Friend . . . ” The Mobius of Friendship and Mentorship as Methodological Approaches to Qualitative Research

Kelly Sassi; Ebony Elizabeth Thomas

This article explores the affordances and risks of practicing friendship and mentorship as methodological approaches in two qualitative studies: (a) the mentor’s study in a diverse 9th grade classroom and (b) the protégé’s subsequent study of teacher professional development in the same school. Friendship methodology, as theorized by Tillmann and others, is extended to include protection and mentoring. The effect of mentoring is demonstrated through examples of the former protégé’s own research. Explosive moments in each study demonstrate how research can be analyzed and the course of the research projects influenced within a friendship/mentorship context. Like friendship-as-method, mentorship as methodology can result in rich data, but there is also the potential for more transparent and rigorous data analysis when the researcher is a mentor because the mentor can model research skills for the protégé-participant. Thus, mentorship as methodology socializes peers into the conventions of qualitative research.


Review of Research in Education | 2017

Disrupting Educational Inequalities through Youth Digital Activism.

Amy Stornaiuolo; Ebony Elizabeth Thomas

This article reviews scholarship on youth and young adult activism in digital spaces, as young users of participatory media sites are engaging in political, civic, social, or cultural action and advocacy online to create social change. The authors argue that youth’s digital activism serves as a central mechanism to disrupt inequality, and that education research should focus on these youth practices, particularly by young people from marginalized communities or identities, in order to provide important counter-narratives to predominant stories circulating about “at-risk”or disaffected youth. The article examines young people’s use of online tools for organizing toward social change across three lines of inquiry—young people’s cultural and political uses of participatory tools and spaces online, new forms of youth civic engagement and activism, and adult-supported programs and spaces facilitating youth activism. In centering the review on youth digital activism, the authors suggest that education researchers can learn from youth themselves about how to disrupt educational inequalities, resulting in a more humanizing stance for education research that takes into fuller account the human potential of all youth, beyond school walls.


Race Ethnicity and Education | 2017

Making it relevant: how a black male teacher sustained professional relationships through culturally responsive discourse

Ebony Elizabeth Thomas; Chezare A. Warren

Abstract What we know about the experiences of black teachers is limited, especially considering the vast amount of research conducted on and about black boys and young men. This article describes and analyzes how a black teacher at a suburban high school in the Midwestern United States negotiated professional relationships through culturally relevant discourse. Anthony Bell was the only black male teacher participating in a classroom discourse analysis study group at a diverse suburban high school. Throughout the course of the semester, Anthony’s stated objective for learning discourse analysis was to understand, structure, and facilitate more productive conversations with a struggling student teacher he was mentoring. Yet Anthony also used his discursive inquiry to “trouble the water” in his classroom and in the study group workshops. Participation in the study group provided Anthony with metalinguistic tools to critique his interactions with his students, student teacher, and professional peers. Anthony’s analyses of his own teaching, his student teacher’s work, the study group, and the school index themes in critical and critical race theory in education. As he became a teacher researcher, Anthony reported a greater sense of professional self-efficacy, eventually facilitating a successful workshop at a national teacher conference. Anthony’s case is an exemplar of the unique and critical role of black men who teach, as well as the imperative of practitioner research within the current climate in teacher education.


English Journal | 2008

Walking the Talk: Examining Privilege and Race in a Ninth-Grade Classroom.

Kelly Sassi; Ebony Elizabeth Thomas


English Journal | 2011

An Ethical Dilemma: Talking About Plagiarism and Academic Integrity in the Digital Age

Ebony Elizabeth Thomas; Kelly Sassi


Research in The Teaching of English | 2015

We Always Talk about Race: Navigating Race Talk Dilemmas in the Teaching of Literature

Ebony Elizabeth Thomas


English Journal | 2010

Applying Toulmin: Teaching Logical Reasoning and Argumentative Writing.

Lesley A. Rex; Ebony Elizabeth Thomas; Steven Engel


Linguistics and Education | 2013

Dilemmatic conversations: Some challenges of culturally responsive discourse in a high school English classroom

Ebony Elizabeth Thomas

Collaboration


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Kelly Sassi

North Dakota State University

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Amy Stornaiuolo

University of Pennsylvania

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Brett L. M. Levy

State University of New York System

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Kathryn Drago

East Carolina University

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