Abby Menter, PhD
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Comparative and International Development Education
Areas of interest
- Culturally sustaining pedagogy
- Educational policy equity
- PhD, Comparative and International Development Education, University of Minnesota, 2024
- MA, Art Education, The Ohio State University, 2010
- BA, Art Education, The Ohio State University, 2008
I live in South Dakota and currently work to support teachers in developing equity-oriented teaching practices. In 2013, I collaborated with several others to co-found 4Rosebud: a community organizing group focused on policy change in support of Lakota students. I currently teach Math for Elementary Teachers at a local college, but also have previous teaching experience at the elementary and middle school levels. I deeply believe in the power of organized people to effect change in policy and practice.
Dissertation
Epistemologies and Enactments of Self-Determination in South Dakota
Advisors: Roozbeh Shirazi and Elizabeth Sumida Huaman
Abstract: In the State of South Dakota, and across the so-called United States in general, political forces continue to attempt to control Indigenous identity, land relationships, and power, despite the characterization of the current policy era as one of Tribal Self-Determination. This critical ethnographic study examines the ways in which these policies are felt and experienced as acts of coloniality and continued attempts at racial and cultural erasure. Epistemologies of decoloniality, however, serve as sources of resistance to hegemonic State violence. The findings of this study explore the main epistemic frames that educators and other education stakeholders use to situate their opposition to coloniality, thereby creating a vision for self-determination that is distinct from that of the Federal government. In this study, three main themes emerged as ways in which educators and education stakeholders epistemically de-link from colonial constructions of Indigenous education, each of which forms a unique pedagogical perspective that guides both theory and practice. These pedagogies, of relationality, of resistance, and of sustenance, act as the ways in which some educators establish counter-hegemonic discourses, practices, and outcomes in their work.
Menter, A. (2013). Democracy or domination: Exploring complexities of community and criticality. In C. Ballengee-Morris & K.Tavin (Eds.). Stand(ing) Up for a Change: Voices of Art Educators. Reston, VA: National Art Education Association.
Menter, A. (2010). Toward a Critical Pedagogical Theory and Practice in Art Education: An Autoethnographic (Re)Vision of Criticality in Initial Teacher Preparation. Thesis. The Ohio State University.
Ballengee-Morris, C., Tavin, K., et al. (April, 2010). Stand(ing) Up for a Change: Voices of Art Educators. Presentation at the National Art Education Association Convention in Baltimore, MD.