Not exact matches
Participants took part in a real - time electronic poll which
explored their views on a series of
issues relating to their profession: Among the results were: over three quarters of BME teachers considered themselves to be ambitious, yet stated they are being held back by
racial discrimination, and the attitude of senior colleagues; nearly two - thirds (62 %) of BME teachers felt their school or college was not seriously committed to addressing their professional development needs and aspirations; 63 % of BME teachers said their employers were not committed to ensuring their mental and physical wellbeing at work, with workload cited as the single most negative factor impacting on their wellbeing; the vast majority of BME teachers felt the Government does not respect and value teachers and does not understand the day to day realities of teaching (99 %); three quarters of BME teachers said they were not confident that their headteacher will make professional and fair decisions regarding their future pay.
Racial prejudice is perhaps the best
explored issue.
Through the use of equity - based protocols and culturally relevant practices, participants will
explore issues in their teaching practice with support from a
racial affinity - based professional learning community.
Through the use of equity - based protocols and culturally relevant practices, participants will
explore issues in their teaching practice with support from a
racial affinity based professional learning community.
In addition to the detective angle, Hartley thoughtfully
explores such
issues as
racial relations, inter - and intra -, as Anglet deals with the censure of her own community, and class as she attempts to work outside the political system to solve the murder.
This provocative exhibition focuses on
issues of
racial, sexual, and historical identity in contemporary culture while
exploring the powerful influence of artistic legacy and community across generations.
This would allow us to
explore the critical viewpoints on Western - centrism and the
racial and multicultural
issues that occur on a global level.
Developing its collection of contemporary art that addresses politically charged
issues, the museum has also acquired a large work on paper by Kara Walker, who is celebrated for her artistic explorations of
racial inequality, and a photograph by Shirin Neshat that
explores gender within post-revolutionary Iran.
Employing a broad array of materials and processes, their work
explores some of the most pressing
issues of our time, including the immigrant experience, transgender rights, the housing crisis,
racial and economic inequality, global warming, and Confederate monuments.
Yinka Shonibare's works
explore the
issues of postcolonialism, national and
racial identity, and class through the media of painting, sculpture, photography and film.
Organized by the Arnika Dawkins Gallery, On Being Black
explores issues of race, colorism and
racial identity.
A Professor of History and an artist herself, Painter frequently
explores issues of
racial and gender identity and how they have figured into the history of America and the West.
Together they produced experimental films that
explored black identity and political
issues such as the
racial tensions that led to riots in the UK during the early and mid-1980s.
Yinka Shonibare MBE's works bring together disparate cultural references and material to
explore issues around colonialism and post-colonialism within the contemporary context of globalisation, as well as
issues of national and
racial identity and class and cultural politics.
She was the recipient of a MacArthur «Genius Grant» in 2016, which she has used to set up The
Racial Imaginary Institute, an interdisciplinary project that
explores race in contemporary society through collaborations with artists, writers and arts institutions, and via its online journal, whose first
issue, devoted to an analysis of «Whiteness», came out in September.
As Basquiat's career evolved, he turned to the creation of multi-panel canvases, paintings with exposed stretcher supports, while continuing to
explore issues of
racial identity.
Many were first published in Life magazine upon the release of Ralph Ellison's award winning novel, which
explored racial and social
issues facing African Americans in the 20th century.
Below I
explore two
issues — the
Racial Discrimination Act (RDA) and the criminal justice system — and show that equality and fairness before the law remains a problem in this country for Indigenous Australians.
This
issue brief
explores the prevalence of
racial disproportionality and disparity in the child welfare system.