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Showing 1 to 15 of 68 results Save | Export
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Jones, Stephanie T.; Melo, Natalie Araujo – Canadian Journal of Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, 2021
Computer science (CS) education finds itself at a pivotal moment to reckon with what it means to accept, use, and create technologies, with the continued recruitment of minoritized students into the field. In this paper, we build on the oral traditions of educating with stories, and take the reader on two journeys. We begin with a story that leads…
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Oral Tradition, Story Telling, Racial Bias
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McMurtry, Teaira – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2021
This article makes a case for why Black Language (BL) must be a part of teachers' conceptualizations of multilingualism in U.S. contexts. BL is a living linguistic legacy, an embodiment of Black culture, and much more than simply a list of distinct grammatical features. For teachers to move toward dispositions and language and literacy pedagogical…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Multilingualism, African American Culture, Teaching Methods
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Gilmore, Amir – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
Inspired by jazz's epistemologies and structures, this article was written as a Black liberatory jazz album on Black Boy Joy. Threaded through musical tracks, Black Boy Joy is conceptualized as a Black spiritual Life Force and a liberatory emotional expression that refuses the anti-Black curriculum antagonizing Black boys. Black Boy Joy centers…
Descriptors: Music, Males, Blacks, Aesthetics
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Mobley, Steve D.; Johnson, Jennifer M.; Drezner, Noah D. – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2022
Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) are racially diverse institutions. As such, this qualitative study examines the interconnected aspects of the college choice processes and campus experiences of White students attending a public HBCU. Utilizing (Renn and Arnold, "The Journal of Higher Education," 2003, 74, 261)…
Descriptors: White Students, Black Colleges, Student Experience, College Choice
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Maragh-Lloyd, Raven – American Journal of Play, 2021
Traditionally, Black communities have used humor to talk back to those in power while avoiding what the author calls "the dominant gaze." She argues that Black humor acts as a resistance, especially when considered through the lens of play. Drawing from cultural play literature, critical race studies, and the literature about Black…
Descriptors: African Americans, African American Culture, Humor, Play
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Brown, Tessa – Community Literacy Journal, 2021
This article interrogates how hiphop composition pedagogies can interrupt what the author terms the "hiphop illiteracies" that circulate in predominantly white institutions (PWIs). An analysis of four college writing classrooms that integrate hiphop texts at one PWI reveals pervasive anti-Blackness in student attitudes, but also in the…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Racial Bias, College Students, Student Attitudes
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Gaines, Leah Tonnette – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2021
Because racism is permanently woven into the fabric of American society, the fight for Black equality and liberation is a constant struggle of resistance. Traditionally, a strong method of resistance utilized by oppressed people has been the use of language. Language is a form of symbolic power, a political force utilized to empower those who make…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Equal Education, Language Usage, Boards of Education
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Mustaffa, Jalil B. – Educational Foundations, 2021
I first describe the Black scholarly dilemma to set up the reader for how spirit murder happens subtly and the ways, I argue, centering Black life can restore our spirits. Through meditating on the existing literature, I argue that exclusion and marginalization are not the primary indicators of spirit murder in the education field or the academy.…
Descriptors: Blacks, Racial Bias, Higher Education, Cultural Influences
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Garad, Brooke Harris – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2021
Scholars, educators, writers, and librarians have been calling for richer literary depictions of Black culture since the 1930s. Using a critical content analysis framework with the books "Ada Twist, "Scientist" and "Crown: An Ode to the Fresh Cut," I discuss how the concepts of fugitivity, fantasy, futurity, and freedom…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Culturally Relevant Education, Diversity, African American Culture
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Beck, Bernard – Multicultural Perspectives, 2019
Contemporary political and cultural realities make the renegotiating of African American cultural images an urgent matter. A recent movement to improve the position of African Americans in the movie business has produced a new wave of debates. Current movies show a variety of approaches to defining those images. The success of "Green…
Descriptors: African American Culture, African Americans, Films, Industry
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Young, Vershawn Ashanti – Journal of College Reading and Learning, 2020
This article analyzes several online performances from the Black Lives Matter movement for the ways they utilize and blend standard academic literacies and African American rhetoric. These performances are discussed as pedagogies of possibility that meet and exceed the common core standards. This talk also points up the crucial roles that racial…
Descriptors: African Americans, Social Justice, Literacy, Code Switching (Language)
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Young, Jemimah; Butler, Bettie Ray; Strong, Kellan; Turner, Maiya A. – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2021
Purpose: This paper aims to argue that culturally responsive approaches to literacy instruction are necessary not only to celebrate Black girl literacies but to also expose, challenge and disrupt antiblackness in English education. However, without explicit exemplars to guide classroom practice, this type of instruction will remain elusive. The…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Literacy Education, African American Students, Females
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Thomas Kpetay, Shakita; Lozenski, Brian D. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2021
Drawing from the histories of nonformal Black education, (Pp)an-Africanist scholarship, and critical qualitative research, this participatory ethnographic study documents an organic conception of public space where Black people, many of whom have been disaffected by traditional public schools, come to teach and learn with each other. The article…
Descriptors: Blacks, Nonformal Education, African Americans, Civil Rights
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Frieson, Brittany L.; Scalise, Makenzi – Bilingual Research Journal, 2021
Drawing on translanguaging and raciolinguistics frameworks in an ethnographic case study, this article contextualizes how young Black American children engage in rich literacy practices to validate their cultural and linguistic identities in an elementary, two-way immersion bilingual program. Findings demonstrated that despite teachers' perceived…
Descriptors: African American Children, African American Culture, Cultural Influences, Black Dialects
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Dillard, Cynthia B. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2020
As teachers in the US context, we have spent precious little time considering what it would mean to be prepared and ready for Black children. In such readiness, (re)cognition of the spirit and spirituality of Black people would be central in understanding and preparing for our children and families. This article asks the question: What would it…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Blacks, Elementary Schools, Cultural Influences
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