Articles

The epistemology of extremism, bias, and violence in American schools: the shift from religious and racial profiling to social belonging and an identity-agnostic perspective

Sabic-El-Rayess, Amra; Joshi, Vik; Hruschka, Timon

This study presents findings on the indicators of educational displacement as an early risk factor for radicalization in school settings in the U.S. We collected and analyzed data from 301 students living in 43 U.S. states to inform the creation of Reimagine Resilience, an innovative violence prevention training program for educators and educational staff developed at Teachers College, Columbia University, and to measure early indications of educational displacement as a risk factor for radicalization. The study shows that poor teacher-student relations and multiple experiences of biased speech and behavior are significant early predictors of the students’ educational displacement. Educational displacement, in this study, is measured as a lack of social belonging in schools.

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Also Published In

Title
Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Community
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/10852352.2024.2324248

More About This Work

Academic Units
Education Policy and Social Analysis
Published Here
February 12, 2025