Critical Geography and Teaching Against Neoliberal Racial Capitalism in New York City Elementary Schools

Authors

  • Debbie Sonu Hunter College, City University of New York
  • Karen Zaino Miami University of Ohio
  • Robert J. Helfenbein Mercer University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14288/ce.v16i1.186957

Keywords:

economic inequality, elementary school, critical geography, curriculum, teaching

Abstract

What might an anti-capitalist education look like? To address this question, we examine the curricular visions of 56 elementary school teachers in New York City, who were asked to design one lesson on the issue of social class and economic inequality. Grounded in neoliberal racial capitalism and critical geography, our analysis finds that teachers who emphasize specific places -- whether schools, city environments, the national context, or global landscapes – are better able to orient their teaching toward explicitly critical and systemic analyses of economic inequality and its constitutive links to race, gender, and other socio-political hierarchies. Their lessons demonstrate how teaching can disrupt the neoliberal over-reliance on the individual consumer typically found in financial literacy schemes. A presentation of their lessons, seldom found in the existing literature, is followed by a discussion of what a multi-scalar approach to economic inequality can offer to the field of research, teacher education, and teaching.

Author Biographies

Debbie Sonu, Hunter College, City University of New York

Debbie Sonu is Professor of Education in the Department of Curriculum and Teaching at Hunter College, City University of New York and doctoral faculty in the PhD in Urban Education Program at the Graduate Center.

Karen Zaino, Miami University of Ohio

Karen Zaino is an Assistant Teaching Professor in the Department of Teaching, Curriculum, and Educational Inquiry at Miami University of Ohio.

Robert J. Helfenbein, Mercer University

Rob Helfenbein is Professor of Curriculum Studies in the Tift College of Education at Mercer University in Georgia.

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Published

2025-01-31

Issue

Section

Neoliberal Capitalism and Public Education