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Chalet A. Jean-Baptiste – ProQuest LLC, 2024
In our political and cultural climate, where America is recovering from a pandemic, affirmative action is no longer the law of the land, DEI programs are being cut, and African American history and heritage are being denied and eradicated; how do African Americans navigate white spaces? How do African American leaders obtain a seat at the table?…
Descriptors: African Americans, Predominantly White Institutions, African American History, African American Culture
Rachel McMillian; Jaminque L. Adams; Tracye Johnson – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2024
While there are many studies which examine the symbiotic relationship between schools and prisons, there are very few studies which center the voices and unique perspectives of Black women educators who teach, collaborate with, and learn alongside incarcerated youth and adults. Therefore, this article focuses on our storied lives as three Black…
Descriptors: Females, Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Experience, Correctional Education
Nocera, Amato – Teachers College Record, 2020
Background/Context: Spurred on by the mass migration of African Americans from the South and blacks from the Caribbean, Harlem by the 1920s was defined by its association with New Negro culture and was widely known as the "mecca" of black life. The New Negro movement, as the period was called by contemporaries, has become a focus of…
Descriptors: African American History, African American Education, Informal Education, Educational Practices
Erickson, Ainsley T. – History of Education Quarterly, 2020
Carl Kaestle defines a generalization as "how we know when we know." Kaestle sketches a model of increasing certainty in historical claims as they are developed and refined at increasing scales of research, from local to international. A historical claim might originate in the study of a particular place or case, but to know that the…
Descriptors: Generalization, Generalizability Theory, Historical Interpretation, Archives
McArthur, Sherell A.; Muhammad, Gholnecsar E. – Urban Education, 2022
Media culture is exploitative and damaging. It reinforces both racist and sexist stereotypes, which places Black young women's unique racialized gender in a position to be overidentified in derogatory ways. The bodies of Black young women, as an example, are labeled with social stigmas that make them identifiable to society at large as deficient.…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, Racial Bias, Gender Bias
Slate, Nico – Research in Drama Education, 2022
Role-play was a popular educational strategy within the American civil rights movement. Many civil rights activists performed the movement in private before performing it again in public. Compared to the scholarship on the role of music in the civil rights movement, the importance of drama has been understudied. The history of role-play as an…
Descriptors: Drama, Role Playing, Civil Rights, Teaching Methods
Colley, Lauren; Mitchell Patterson, Tiffany – Multicultural Perspectives, 2022
In this article we outline the importance of centering Black women as critical historical actors within social studies curricula and teaching. We explored the ways in which Black women were represented throughout 38 secondary lesson plans within the fully online National Women's History Museum and discussed how traditional curricular content and…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, Social Studies, Lesson Plans
Willis, Arlette Ingram; McMillon, Gwendolyn Thompson; Smith, Patriann – Teachers College Press, 2022
Drawing on the authors' experiences as Black parents, researchers, teachers, and teacher educators, this timely book presents a multipronged approach to affirming Black lives and literacies. The authors believe change is needed--not within Black children, but in the way they are perceived and educated, particularly in reading, writing, and…
Descriptors: African American Students, Literacy Education, African American History, African American Culture
Janice Barge Clarke – ProQuest LLC, 2022
In this study the experiences of Black (a.k.a. African Americans/ Negroes) educational leaders were explored focusing on the period during the transition to a more desegregated public- school setting in the state of Florida. Using retrospective storytelling and reflections of 'leading' during desegregation, the lived experiences of those in…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, School Desegregation, Memory, African Americans
Emy Nelson Decker; Benjamin Lugu – Innovative Higher Education, 2024
This article employs quantitative critical race theory (QuantCrit), set against a historical context backdrop, to understand key aspects of Black religious engagement and post-college educational pathways. The variables selected for this study illuminate post-graduation outcomes for Black students valued by the Freedmen's Bureau and other…
Descriptors: African American Education, African American Students, Blacks, National Surveys
William Bosshardt – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
In the early 1940s, Black artist Jacob Lawrence painted a series of 60 panels that are now collectively called "The Migration Series." The panels tell the story of how Black Americans migrated from the South to the North, beginning with World War I. The panels provide an uncommon example of the intersection of economics, Black American…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Art, Diversity, African Americans
Karen Sotiropoulos – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2024
Drawing on experiential, literary and historical narratives, this article connects the long history shaping the school-to-prison-pipeline to the contemporary experiences of Black youth in today's educational system. It maps abolitionism from its origins as a movement to end slavery through the ongoing Black freedom struggles that have challenged…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Discipline Policy, Racism, Correctional Institutions
Payne, Kelly M.; Ibrahimpašic, Emira – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
The changing campus demographics following World War II and the U.S. Black Student Movement of the 1960s unified and influenced the values of academic advising and student support services. This article argues that this context of U.S. college civil rights protest resulted in the call for more inclusive student support services that combined…
Descriptors: Academic Advising, Civil Rights, Student Rights, Inclusion
Phelps, Maya; Taylor, Emille; Purdy, Michelle A. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2023
Drawing on counter-storytelling and oral history methodology, we reflect on how the teaching and learning of the past, present, and future of Black education in the Spring of 2022 both renewed and inspired us as students and a professor. Using visuals to show how students made meaning of what they were learning, we explore the dynamics, content,…
Descriptors: African American Education, Teaching Methods, Story Telling, Oral History
Fallace, Thomas – Teachers College Record, 2023
Background/Context: Historical studies of this volatile period in educational history (1960-2003 tend to focus on educational policy and/or curriculum, but rarely address changes in learning theory. Numerous historical studies have traced how psychologists, psychometricians, policymakers, and social scientists have dismissed the intellectual…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Culturally Relevant Education, African American Students, Educational History

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