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Standifer, Derrick D. – ProQuest LLC, 2022
In 1899, in Eatonville, Florida, Russell and Mary Calhoun, two African American teachers from Tuskegee Institute, founded the Robert Hungerford School for African American students. Many White southerners were ferociously against African American education. However, the Calhouns were able to galvanize resources and support from white donors to…
Descriptors: Educational History, Access to Education, African American Education, African American Teachers
Peters, April L. – Peabody Journal of Education, 2019
The history of education for African Americans in the United States is one of struggle largely due to laws that forbade the education of enslaved Africans. Resultingly, education exists in a broader system of oppression. Historically, school desegregation displaced many Black teachers and administrators and ultimately forced Black professionals…
Descriptors: Desegregation Litigation, School Desegregation, African American Education, African American Leadership
Garry, Vanessa – American Educational History Journal, 2017
The discriminatory practices against African Americans during the Jim Crow era in St. Louis, Missouri did not deter Dr. Ruth Harris, the first African American female president of Stowe Teachers College (STC) in St. Louis, from accepting the challenge of leading the African American teachers' college from 1940 to 1954. Her appointment to President…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, African American Education, African American Teachers, African American Leadership
Smith, Eva C. – ProQuest LLC, 2013
African American educational leadership has long been part of American education and African American activism to resist oppression. However, the field of educational leadership has rarely included the contributions of African American leaders, particularly women leaders, into mainstream leadership theory and practices. This omission is difficult…
Descriptors: African American Education, African American Leadership, Superintendents, Females
Learning from the Past: Leadership Philosophies of Pioneer Presidents of Historically Black Colleges
Boggs, Olivia M. – Online Submission, 2011
At the close of the Civil War the United States was forced to grapple with the tremendous challenge of what to do with the millions of newly freed men, women, and children who, for more than three centuries, had been denied basic human rights, including learning how to read and write. During Reconstruction, several educational institutions were…
Descriptors: College Presidents, Black Colleges, African American Leadership, Educational History
Alston, Judy A. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2012
African-American women's leadership experiences and "herstories" are absent from the leadership canon. In the context of preparation, practice, and research, a few cornerstones of leadership (power, control, authority, and influence) have historically been used in a negative fashion to marginalize, silence, and erase the accomplishments of…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, Instructional Leadership, Leadership Training
Bieze, Michael Scott, Ed.; Gasman, Marybeth, Ed. – Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012
Booker T. Washington, a founding father of African American education in the United States, has long been studied, revered, and reviled by scholars and students. Born into slavery, freed and raised in the Reconstruction South, and active in educational reform through the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Washington sought to use…
Descriptors: Educational History, United States History, African American Achievement, African American Education
Long, Kim Cliett – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2011
The purpose of this paper is to explore and analyze the leadership traits of Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune, an African-American woman of history, using the servant leadership theory developed by Robert K. Greenberg and the ten characteristics of servant leadership as conceived by Larry C. Spears. This exploration seeks to identify the significant…
Descriptors: African American Leadership, Females, Leadership Qualities, Leadership Styles
Leak, Halima N.; Reid, Chera D. – International Journal of Educational Advancement, 2010
Examining Black church support of higher education in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, this article highlights the longstanding project of African-American self-determination. Motivated donors, many of who would not in their lifetime see the fruits of their gifts, made faithful investments in the project of racial uplift.…
Descriptors: Fund Raising, Higher Education, Black Colleges, Private Financial Support
Haar, Jean M.; Robicheau, Jerry W. – Journal of Women in Educational Leadership, 2009
School districts are faced with challenges resulting from the changing demographics of the student population. Consequently, school districts are creating positive, multicultural learning environments. School districts intent on establishing multicultural learning environments should consider the contributions people of color, specifically women…
Descriptors: Females, Leadership Training, School Districts, Womens Education
Brown, Ruth Nicole, Ed.; Kwakye, Chamara Jewel, Ed. – Peter Lang New York, 2012
"Wish To Live: The Hip-hop Feminism Pedagogy Reader" moves beyond the traditional understanding of the four elements of hip-hop culture--rapping, breakdancing, graffiti art, and deejaying--to articulate how hip-hop feminist scholarship can inform educational practices and spark, transform, encourage, and sustain local and global youth…
Descriptors: Sexuality, Freedom, Intimacy, Autobiographies
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
Horsford, Sonya Douglass – Journal of Negro Education, 2009
The purpose of this study is to document the segregated schooling reflections of Black school superintendents and explore how those experiences informed their educational philosophies in the post-desegregation era. Critical race theory is used as a methodological and analytical framework to present participants' reflections of living in segregated…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, African American Education, Superintendents, Critical Theory
Nobles, Wade W. – Review of Educational Research, 2008
This interpretive review draws on a number of Asa G. Hilliard's Kemetic (ancient Egyptian) writings to examine his conception of educational excellence in ancient Kemet and for African American education today. The review offers an interpretation of Hilliard's lifelong quest for excellence in education, which is especially revealed in his analysis…
Descriptors: Excellence in Education, African American Education, Educational Quality, Foreign Countries
Alridge, Derrick P. – History of Education Quarterly, 2007
Anna Julia Cooper and W.E.B. Du Bois were two of the most prominent African-American educators of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. During this period, they both envisioned a broad education tailored specifically to the critical intellectual and vocational needs of the entire black community. In this essay, the author examines common themes…
Descriptors: African American Education, Educational Philosophy, Social Change, Womens Education
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