Ethnic Studies Key Concepts

Our Key Concepts Notebook is a student-facing tool designed to provide definitions, examples, and insight related to Ethnic Studies concepts. Users will note that these are not textbook definitions but instead explanations and examples that highlight the ways these concepts are thought about and used in Ethnic Studies.

This tool is designed for Intro to Ethnic Studies courses or courses taught through an Ethnic Studies lens. Teachers may guide students to strategically engage with particular concepts (slides) as helpful constructs for analyzing oral histories and/or relating to other elements of their enacted curriculum. Teachers and students alike may find the embedded links useful for improving their understanding of these concepts as they relate to Ethnic Studies.

Analytic Summary Paragraph Template

If a summary represents a brief representation of a text, experience, event or other phenomenon, then you can think of an analytical summary as both a representation of the text or phenomenon and your analysis of it. An Ethnic Studies analytical summary uses an analytic lens grounded in Ethnic Studies themes/ concepts/ perspectives such as race/ism, ethnicity, intersectionality, oppression, resistance, and/or liberation. It might also include an analysis of perspective, make historical and present-day connections, attempt to unearth underlying causes and acts of agency, or explore personal relevance. 

Sample Structure for an Analytical Summary

Sentence One:

Introduces the text (oral history) and makes an assertion about what the interviewee helps listeners to understand.

Sentences Two-Three:

Provides a summary of the major points or events expressed in the oral history and provides illustrations/examples.

Sentences Four-Five:

Uses an Ethnic Studies lens to analyze the points or events summarized above.

Sentence Six:

Connects the summary and analysis back to the assertion.

Analytic Summary Sentence Starters

The Four "I's" of Oppression

PREJUDICE + POWER = RACISM

Created by Ryan Trammell with assistance from Dr. Jesse Mills (University of San Diego) and Dr. Kelly Leon (San Diego State University)