
Reflections On Teaching Anthropologically And Fostering Belonging As Anti-Racist Allies In A ‘Widening Participation’ University: An Ecological Approach
Author(s) -
Julie Botticello,
Anna Caffrey
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
teaching anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2053-9843
DOI - 10.22582/ta.v10i1.589
Subject(s) - institution , openness to experience , sociology , racism , work (physics) , curriculum , higher education , action (physics) , extension (predicate logic) , teaching staff , pedagogy , political science , gender studies , psychology , social science , social psychology , law , engineering , mechanical engineering , physics , quantum mechanics , computer science , programming language
This article critically reflects on anti-racist and anthropological teaching practices in a widening participation university. It argues that to make meaningful change to entrenched racism and awarding gaps in higher education, lecturers must take action and work towards embedding anti-racism into every level of the university structure. We propose using an ecological model with lecturers at its heart as a practical tool to support this work. Lecturers can begin by examining themselves and bring their vulnerabilities and openness to change to their different fields of connectivity – with students, with the curriculum, with academic structures, and with colleagues, across the institution. Such work helps challenge sedimented beliefs and practices and moves the institution toward becoming a more inclusive or pro-belonging university for students and staff alike.