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Aaron Rabinowitz – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2024
HBO's "Lovecraft Country" is a model resource for developing speculative civic literacies, which are forms of meaning making aimed at helping students conceive of a more equitable democratic society. Speculative civic literacies and "Lovecraft Country" both center the tension between Afrofuturism and Afropessimism in the…
Descriptors: Television, Popular Culture, Afrocentrism, Fiction
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McFerguson, Marquese; Durham, Aisha – Community Literacy Journal, 2021
Nipsey Hussle is a post hip hop icon. In this essay, we mine popular music and media coverage of Nipsey to describe his artistry and advocacy anchored by his articulation of an African American diasporic identity, his ambivalence as an independent rapper within a mainstream music industry, and his leverage of Black capital in his Crenshaw…
Descriptors: Music, Musicians, African Americans, African American Influences
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Bonnie J. Williams-Farrier – College Composition and Communication, 2017
Code-switching pedagogies do not consider that some features of African American Verbal Tradition (AVT) are rhetorically effective mainstream communication structures in academic writing. My research asserts that when teaching language/ dialect difference in majority white school settings, contrastive analysis techniques such as these may have…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Black Dialects, Dialect Studies, Language Variation
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Jones, Brian – Journal of Negro Education, 2018
The author argues that the ascendance of individualistic, free market-oriented ideas about the education of Black people is best understood as the product of the decline of collective social movements. The careers of two of the most well-known American Black educators illustrate this pattern. Booker T. Washington and Geoffrey Canada rose to…
Descriptors: African American Education, African American History, African American Teachers, Educational Philosophy
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Thomas, Jennifer C. – Journal of Negro Education, 2018
Few realize that, historically, the women elected to serve as "Queens" of Howard University, were often reflections of political, social, and cultural issues of the time. This parade of beauty, intellect, and charm, was an unofficial barometer of where the University as well as the country stood on matters that pertained to cultural…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, African American Influences, Civil Rights, Competition
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Hayes, Worth Kamili – American Educational History Journal, 2010
Education played a pivotal role in African-Americans' post-World War II struggle for equality. Many activists believed that victories against racially discriminatory school systems would lead to gains in other critical areas. By examining Howalton Day School, a black private school on Chicago's South Side in operation from 1946-1986, this article…
Descriptors: Public Education, African Americans, Role of Education, Social Justice
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Balcazar, Fabricio E.; Oberoi, Ashmeet K.; Suarez-Balcazar, Yolanda; Alvarado, Francisco – Rehabilitation Research, Policy, and Education, 2012
A review of vocational rehabilitation (VR) data from a Midwestern state was conducted to identify predictors of rehabilitation outcomes for African American consumers. The database included 37,404 African Americans who were referred or self-referred over a period of five years. Logistic regression analysis indicated that except for age and…
Descriptors: Vocational Rehabilitation, African Americans, State Agencies, Probability
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Giles, Mark S. – Journal of Negro Education, 2010
This study examines aspects of Dr. Howard W Thurman's (1900-1982) career in higher education through the lenses of Black spirituality and critical race theory. The experiences of Howard Thurman offers distinct perspectives through which to interrogate the Black experience in American higher education and the intersections of race, religion and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Black Colleges, Religious Factors, African American Leadership
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Gaines, Robert W., II – Journal of Negro Education, 2010
As the operational center of the Civil Rights Movement, the Black church fostered community, functioned as an educative space, and promoted collaborative efforts among churches. Similarly, the modern Black church has the opportunity to invest in educating, organizing, and mobilizing people within the church and the local community. By investing in…
Descriptors: African American Students, African American Community, Civil Rights, Academic Achievement
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Beyerlein, Kraig; Andrews, Kenneth T. – Social Forces, 2008
This article examines why some black Southerners but not others were politically active during the early stages of the civil rights movement. Using a survey of more than 600 black Southerners in 1961, we investigate whether perceptions about opportunity or threat, politicized social capital and individual orientations toward social change shaped…
Descriptors: African American Community, Civil Rights, Voting, Social Change
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Codjoe, Henry – Intercultural Education, 2006
This paper focuses on the educational experiences of African-Canadian youth in Canada. Traditionally, the tendency is to emphasize the poor academic performance of black students or issues and problems related to reasons for academic failure or to stereotype them as "loud, lazy, muscular, criminal, athletic, dumb, deprived, dangerous,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, African American Influences, Cultural Background, Academic Achievement
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O'Brien, Thomas V. – Teachers College Record, 2007
Background/Context: Scholars from a number of fields have offered explanations as to why Brown v. Board of Education came up short in fully integrating school and society. Some have argued that the decision was a result of flawed logic or misguided litigation. Others have held that Brown fell short of its promises due to a lack of federal…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Organizational Change, Educational Change, Court Litigation
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Price, Robert J., Jr. – Convergence, 2005
Adult education instructors and administrators, who typically are not members of the hip hop generation, often have little knowledge and understanding of rap music (also known as gangsta rap) and hip hop culture, and consequently do not take the black popular cultural phenomenon seriously as it relates to adult education. Adult educators,…
Descriptors: Urban Youth, Adult Education, Masculinity, Adult Educators