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Lionnell Smith – Communication Teacher, 2024
This activity draws on the African American rhetorical tradition to extend the project of communication activism pedagogy. Through instruction that decenters the Greco-Roman rhetorical tradition, this assignment invites students to engage in protest rhetoric that facilitates an understanding of how to use communication and rhetorical resources to…
Descriptors: African American Culture, Rhetoric, Interpersonal Communication, Social Change
Amber M. Neal-Stanley – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2024
Scholars have utilized the allegory of Reconstruction to trace threads between the historical and contemporary struggles for freedom. In this article, I highlight the ways that abolition has always been a dual project and remains as such in our present time. It calls for the complete destruction of oppressive structures while simultaneously…
Descriptors: African Americans, Feminism, Social Justice, Racism
Beck, Bernard – Multicultural Perspectives, 2021
Two movies about Black protest movement leaders in the 1960s are playing on home screens during African American History Month during the COVID-19 pandemic. The movies are made by African American moviemakers and are focused on Black protest movements. One Night in Miami and Judas and the Black Messiah present the lives and activities of Black…
Descriptors: Films, African American History, COVID-19, Pandemics
Barnes, Nailah Reine – Liberal Education, 2020
When the author looked back at her first two years at Spelman, a historically Black liberal arts college for women, she can see that the African Diaspora and the World (ADW) program had been paramount to her development as a culturally competent scholar with a nuanced understanding of systemic racism. In the majority-White schools she attended for…
Descriptors: College Students, African American Students, African American History, College Curriculum
Suchor, Katerina – Teachers College Record, 2020
Background: The historical literature on the civil rights movement has tended to underemphasize the movement's educational activities, while literature on the civil rights and Black Power movements has overemphasized ideological and tactical differences between these chapters in the struggle for Black liberation. A few studies have examined…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Schools, African American Influences, African American History
Suchor, Katerina – Grantee Submission, 2020
Background: The historical literature on the civil rights movement has tended to underemphasize the movement's educational activities, while literature on the civil rights and Black Power movements has overemphasized ideological and tactical differences between these chapters in the struggle for Black liberation. A few studies have examined…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Schools, African American Influences, African American History
Jason Seals – International Journal of Human Rights Education, 2024
This article analyzes the Know Your Rights Camp's "Speaking Out Against the Violence of Policing and Oppression: A Political Education Curriculum" from the campaign founded by Colin Kaepernick. The article evaluates the curriculum with a multifaceted perspective, specifically, the approach to inform learners about their foundational…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Teaching Methods, Personal Autonomy, Student Empowerment
Sanchez, Adam – American Educator, 2019
The real story of slavery's end involves one of the most significant social movements in the history of the United States and the heroic actions of the enslaved themselves. Revealing this history helps students begin to answer fundamental questions that urgently need to be addressed in classrooms across the country: How does major social change…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, African American History, Slavery
Hess, Juliet; Talbot, Brent C. – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2019
In 1963--a racially-charged time in the United States--James Baldwin delivered "A Talk to Teachers," urging educators to engage youth in difficult conversations about current events. We concur with Giroux (2011, 2019) that political forces influence our educational spaces and that classrooms should not be viewed as apolitical, but…
Descriptors: Music, Music Education, Music Teachers, Popular Culture
David Ragland – International Journal of Human Rights Education, 2021
Despite the rise of the Western human rights regime in the years following WWII, Black communities suffered from continuous human rights abuses. The work of the Truth Telling Project during the Ferguson movement discovered flaws in Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) models when applied to Black liberation struggles in the United States.…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Decolonization, African American History, African American Community
Smith, William L. – Social Education, 2017
In the United States, there's a national infatuation with those who have broken barriers--racial, religious, gendered, and so on--and have presumably changed the rules of the game for others. News outlets and history textbooks seem unable to resist a good story of "firstness." Researchers have speculated why this is the case: What better…
Descriptors: United States History, History Instruction, African American History, Barriers
Ndumu, Ana – Journal of Education for Library and Information Science, 2021
This demographic study contributes to scholarship on the recruitment of Blacks into the US LIS workforce by situating Black librarianship within broader population trends. The research combines historical LIS reports, Africana studies scholarship, and federal data to describe how long-term transitions in the overall US Black population influence…
Descriptors: Blacks, African American Students, Student Recruitment, Information Science Education
Tinson, Christopher M. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2017
This essay centers the defense of black educational possibility in the work of historian, pioneering sociologist, and scholar, W.E.B. Du Bois (1868-1963) as a conduit igniting what critical social theorists Stefano Harney and Fred Moten (2013) call Fugitive Black Study. The critical appreciation of Du Bois forces us to consider the weight of…
Descriptors: Black Studies, African American History, Educational Sociology, Educational Practices
Manfra, Meghan – Social Education, 2017
Colson Whitehead's acclaimed book, "The Underground Railroad," follows Cora, a runaway slave seeking the nearly impossible goal of freedom. The fictionalized account of a runaway slave girl resonates with a reading of Harriet Jacobs's true account in "Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl." One of the most influential works of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Social Studies, Slavery, United States History
Turk, Diana B.; Berman, Stacie Brensilver – Social Education, 2018
A project-based approach to studying the civil rights movement can stimulate student engagement and their sense of connection to this historic period. The authors taught this project-based learning (PBL) unit on the American civil rights movement multiple times in the past 10 years to classes of middle school, high school general education,…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Student Projects, United States History, Civil Rights