Publication Date
In 2025 | 2 |
Since 2024 | 17 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 51 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 103 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 155 |
Descriptor
African American History | 162 |
African Americans | 62 |
United States History | 57 |
Racial Bias | 46 |
Slavery | 37 |
Educational History | 33 |
Activism | 31 |
African American Education | 31 |
Social Justice | 30 |
Civil Rights | 28 |
African American Students | 27 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Publication Type
Reports - Evaluative | 162 |
Journal Articles | 155 |
Tests/Questionnaires | 3 |
Information Analyses | 2 |
Opinion Papers | 2 |
Speeches/Meeting Papers | 2 |
Books | 1 |
Education Level
Location
District of Columbia | 5 |
New York (New York) | 5 |
North Carolina | 5 |
Alabama | 4 |
Florida | 3 |
Illinois (Chicago) | 3 |
Pennsylvania | 3 |
Georgia | 2 |
Michigan | 2 |
Mississippi | 2 |
Ohio | 2 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Brendan Keller-Tuberg – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2025
The second half of jazz's history has been defined by its expansion from more informal spaces into academies and concert halls. Integral to this cultural transformation has been the advent and standardization of collegiate jazz education. This paper explores the pedagogical and institutional responsibilities of institutional jazz education through…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Higher Education, African American History
Brianne Pitts; Dawnavyn James; Gregory Simmons – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
Some Black histories are absolutely dreadful. When we consider enslavement, racial violence, the terrors in the lynching of Emmett Till, the destruction of Tulsa during the Race Massacre, and the intergenerational traumas these events left behind, the residues of dread are made visible. Black histories are in a contentious social-political moment…
Descriptors: African American History, Elementary Secondary Education, Teachers, Educational Strategies
Christa J. Porter; Wilson K. Okello; Terah J. Stewart – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
As scholars, teachers, and researchers within academe we have, at times, felt the gravity, nuance, and depth of Black feminist theories and epistemologies have resulted in articulations and manifestations so flat they are rendered illegible and almost always universally synonymous. While there are certainly deep and rich connections among and…
Descriptors: African Americans, Feminism, Epistemology, Educational Theories
Jon Hale – Urban Education, 2024
The Freedom School Movement originated at the nexus of the struggles for liberation and full citizenship. Beginning with the articulation of education as a means to freedom during the era of enslavement, the ideology behind Freedom Schools was an integral aspect of the long Black freedom struggle in the United States. Freedom Schools have…
Descriptors: Schools, Culturally Relevant Education, African American History, Educational History
Kisha Porcher; Shamaine Bertrand – Journal of Urban Learning, Teaching, and Research, 2023
Black Gaze Framework (BGF) is a promising pathway to center and celebrate Blackness in education for liberation. We provide an overview of anti-Blackness within education and teacher education, share the BGF, and apply that framework to courses within teacher education, we have taught. Like BlackCrit, BGF calls for "the specificity of the…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Racism, Teacher Education, African American Education
wilson, gloria j. – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2023
A growing and influential cohort of Black scholar-creatives are choosing to think, theorize, aesthetically practice, and articulate blackness (Black being and living) in excess of a settled Western racial logic (nonbeing) that produced it. I set forth to advance a paradigm of Black study for thinking and theorizing the intersections of Black…
Descriptors: Blacks, Scholarship, Creativity, Aesthetics
Jessica Oddy – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2024
This article asserts that the Black Radical Tradition (BRT), grounded in historical and structural inquiry, offers tools to reinterpret EiE radically--the BRT encompasses a tradition rooted in diverse African intellectual and activist inquiries, providing a multifaceted theoretical framework. Relevant to humanitarian scholarship, the BRT…
Descriptors: Emergency Programs, Racial Discrimination, Activism, Critical Race Theory
Anders Ackfeldt – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2024
This article explores the integration of hip-hop with Islamic themes in the religious education (RE) classroom, with a focus on transcending the constraints of traditional narratives and creating a dynamic and wide-ranging understanding of Islamic traditions of interpretations. Drawing inspiration from Richard Bulliet's book Islam: A View from the…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Music, Popular Culture, Islam
Danielle I. J. Charlemagne – Curriculum Inquiry, 2024
In the US curriculum, "The History of Mary Prince" (Prince, 1831) is an under-recognized account of Black enslavement and the salt industry in the 19th century. Mary Prince, a Black enslaved woman and salt laborer, is the author of the earliest known anti-slavery, anti-colonial autobiography written by a self-manumitted Black woman.…
Descriptors: Slavery, African American History, United States History, Autobiographies
Dennis, Ashley D. – History of Education Quarterly, 2022
This paper examines the first mandatory Black history curriculum in a US public school system, implemented in Chicago Public Schools between 1942 and 1945. Researched and designed by Madeline Morgan, the curriculum supplemented existing social studies lesson plans with Black people's contributions to US society. How did she win approval for the…
Descriptors: African American History, Educational History, Curriculum, School Districts
Derek H. Alderman; Ethan Bottone – Geography Teacher, 2024
This paper offers the intellectual goals and content that guided a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) K-12 Summer Institute entitled "The Role of Geographic Mobility in the African American Freedom Struggle." Readers are provided background and concepts for exploring Black geographies of mobility in classrooms. Geographic…
Descriptors: Migration, African Americans, African American History, Civil Rights
Okello, Wilson Kwamogi – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
Carcerality is more than a physical occurrence, but a lasting psychological, spiritual, and emotional state of being that gets in the body and directs how one may move in and through the world. As a contour of whiteness, carcerality normalizes ways of being that are consistent with rationality and reason privileging mind over body; intellectual…
Descriptors: Instruction, Curriculum, African Americans, Whites
Derek H. Alderman; Ethan Bottone; Kurt Butefish; Joshua L. Kenna; Katrina Stack – Geography Teacher, 2024
In July 2022, the University of Tennessee and the Tennessee Geographic Alliance hosted a three-week summer institute funded by the National Endowment for Humanities (NEH) as part of its "A More Perfect Union" initiative to promote a deeper understanding of United States history and culture. Eighteen K-12 educators from across the country…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Summer Programs, United States History
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
Taylor, Alice Y.; Gordon, C. Darius; Pereira, Amilcar A. – Comparative Education Review, 2023
This article examines the relationship between Black social movements in Brazil and the United States through over a century of formations of struggle. Drawing from a review of Black periodicals in three time periods ranging from twentieth-century print press to contemporary digital social media, this article affirms the significance of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Blacks, African Americans, Racism