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Griffin, Autumn A.; Crawford, Angela; Bentum, Bonnee Breese; Reed, Samuel Aka; Winikur, Geoffrey; Stornaiuolo, Amy; Rosser, Barrett; Monea, Bethany; Thomas, Ebony Elizabeth – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2023
Throughout this article we argue that collectivity and soul inform the work of the expert teachers who we refer to as Jazz Pedagogues. Jazz's complicated history, like teaching, calls for a consideration of the painful, the messy, the beautiful, and the healing. We, a team of university researchers and classroom teachers, examine the ways jazz can…
Descriptors: Music, Teaching Methods, Social Justice, Racism
Imani Masters Goffney; Charles E. Wilkes II – Theory Into Practice, 2025
African American learners deserve liberating learning experiences, yet rarely receive them. We argue that the framework of Afrofuturism is a productive strategy for reconceptualizing the work of mathematics teaching as liberating and empowering for African American learners and the Rights of the Learner Framework offers useful tools to enable…
Descriptors: African American History, African American Education, Mathematics Education, Culturally Relevant Education
Grey, ThedaMarie Gibbs; Williams-Farrier, Bonnie J. – Journal of Literacy Research, 2017
Through this piece, we draw upon critical race theory and Collins's Afrocentric feminist epistemology to highlight the importance of storytelling as a knowledge validation system in Black women's language. We illuminate and analyze a dialogic performance of two Black female literacy scholars in a coffee house "sipping tea," sharing…
Descriptors: Race, Critical Theory, African American Teachers, Literacy
Brookfield, Stephen D. – International Journal of Adult Vocational Education and Technology, 2014
Herbert Marcuse's concept of repressive tolerance argues that behind the justification of tolerance lies the possibility of ideological domination. Tolerance allows intolerable practices to go unchallenged and flattens discussion to assume all viewpoints have equal validity. When alternative, dissenting views are inserted into the curriculum…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Prosocial Behavior, Educational Practices, Ideology
Ellis, Auburn E. – Online Submission, 2013
Background: Manuscript written for the Adult Education Research Conference based on dissertation research completed at National Louis University. Purpose: To increase knowledge base of art based learning as a mode of anti-racist pedagogy and the use of an Africentric framework for continuing and professional education. Setting: African Centered…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Urban Schools, Public Schools, Elementary Secondary Education

McWhorter, John H. – Black Scholar, 1997
"Ebonics II" is the position that there is no significant gap between black and standard English but that teaching standard English as a foreign language would alleviate the stigma attached to black English. Acknowledging black English and promoting Afrocentric curricula while teaching standard English would overcome the resistance many children…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Black Culture, Black Dialects, Cultural Differences

Miller, John J., Ed. – 1996
The essays in this collection place the current Afrocentric movement in its historical context and offer alternative suggestions about how to teach African American students about their history. The first section deals with the roots of Afrocentrism, analyzes the content of Afrocentric books and curricula, and discusses the impact of Afrocentrism…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Black Culture, Black History, Black Students

Henry, Annette – Canadian Journal of Education, 1993
Some epistemological issues underpinning alternative conceptualizations of education of children of African descent in Canada are discussed, with reference to the agency and the subjectivity of black female educators. The standard epistemologies must be reshaped to the pedagogical realities of black teachers and students in Canada. (SLD)
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Black History, Black Students, Black Teachers

Kifano, Sabira – Journal of Negro Education, 1996
Examines the history, philosophy, methods, and operations of the Mary McLeod Bethune Institute, an Afrocentric supplementary Saturday elementary school in Los Angeles (California). Qualitative data show the role this enrichment plays in developing socially active and capable African American youth through the study of African American culture and…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Black Culture, Black Education, Black Students
Koritz, Douglas, Ed.; And Others – 1995
Selected papers are presented from a national conference on urban issues. They are: (1) "Collaboration as a Social Process: Inter-Institutional Cooperation and Educational Change" (Charles F. Underwood and Hardy T. Frye); (2) "Mobilizing the Village To Educate the Child" (Valerie Maholmes); (3) "Pathways to Teaching: An Urban Teacher Licensure…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Black Students, Cooperation, Disadvantaged Youth
Boykin, A. Wade – 1992
Educational reform efforts to date in the United States have not been germane or responsive to the social problems of African American children. The reform efforts advanced to date have only been exercises in tinkering around the educational edges. Our educational focus, the origin of which is outlined, must shift in at least two major ways.…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Afrocentrism, Black Students, Educational Assessment