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Murray, Alana; Woyshner, Christine – Social Education, 2017
In the early twentieth century in the American South, Black women teachers were especially dedicated to the creation of community and local institutions. They not only supported and taught Black history, but also created key texts that enabled a more accurate accounting of Black history. Educational leaders such as Nannie Helen Burroughs, Mary…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Curriculum, Females, African American History
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Lawton, Pamela Harris – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2017
Published histories of American art education seldom include the stories and accomplishments of Black art educators. There is a need to research, teach, and publish these histories to provide a more inclusive and equitable picture of American art education and to encourage more people of color to consider careers in the field. Using primary and…
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Teachers, African American Teachers, African American Education
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Robinson, Derrick – Peabody Journal of Education, 2020
Black male teachers possess an epistemological and pedagogical stance that is largely different from their non-color counterparts. Having a nontraditional stance can be problematic when evaluated by school leaders who hold traditional views of teaching and learning. Where many Black male preservice teachers enter the profession with desires to be…
Descriptors: African American Teachers, Males, Racial Differences, Gender Differences
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White, Terrenda; Woodward, Brian; Graham, DaVonna; Milner, H. Richard, IV.; Howard, Tyrone C. – Journal of Teacher Education, 2020
This article examines interview responses from prominent education researchers who were asked to consider the role of major educational policies in the underrepresentation of Black teachers in public schools. Participants considered policies related to accountability and market reforms including testing, school choice and charter schools, and…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, African American Teachers, Diversity (Faculty), Disproportionate Representation
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Olitsky, Stacy – Education and Urban Society, 2020
To effectively teach historically marginalized groups of students, educators have argued for increasing recruitment and retention of teachers of color. This qualitative study draws on identity theory, exploring the relationship between school structures, self-talk, identity development, and retention of an African American woman science teacher.…
Descriptors: African American Teachers, Females, Women Faculty, Science Teachers
Herbert Leon Blackmon Jr. – ProQuest LLC, 2020
The purpose of this study is to share how African American/Black male K-12 novice educators navigated their own educational journey to become K-12 educators in an urban school district in central Alabama. An urban school district was identified from findings from the Census Bureau and had a school that sat inside an urbanized area and inside a…
Descriptors: African American Teachers, Males, Beginning Teachers, Elementary Secondary Education
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Egan, John D. – Georgia Journal of College Student Affairs, 2019
This essay explores the unjust experiences of Black males and minority faculty on college campuses that perpetuate inequality in higher education. The literature shows Black male undergraduates experienced both overt racism and more subtle insults on some college campuses, which serve as a barrier to integration into the college system. This essay…
Descriptors: African American Students, African American Teachers, Males, Undergraduate Students
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Elliott, Kayla C.; Warshaw, Jarrett B.; deGregory, Crystal A. – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2019
Much of the research and discussion of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) focuses on four-year institutions, impeding the significance of their two-year counterparts. Using extant literature and data from the National Center for Education Statistics' "Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System" (IPEDS), this paper…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Community Colleges, Institutional Characteristics, Educational History
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Smith, Shirlene D. A.; Alston, Geleana Drew – Journal for the Advancement of Educational Research International, 2019
The aim of this qualitative research study was to explore faculty advisors' lived experiences in advising graduate adult learners at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). The extant body of literature does not adequately examine the experiences of faculty who serve as graduate academic advisors and does little to address the unique…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Academic Advising, Faculty Advisers, Barriers
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Sophia Tatiana Sarigianides – English Education, 2019
What might happen if teachers instruct youth directly about historically situated views of adolescence? This 10-week qualitative study examines what happened when a Black Jamaican English teacher instructed Black and Latino seniors in AP English about adolescence as a construct and guided them to apply this sociocultural lens of youth to texts in…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Secondary Education, Secondary School Teachers, African American Teachers
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Hijazi, Nabila – Composition Forum, 2018
In this interview, Shirley Wilson Logan reflects on her major roles as a scholar, teacher, and an administrator. She describes her journey as chair of the Conference on College Composition and Communication, only one of a few black women to do so. Logan is also credited with launching the study of African American women's rhetoric as a field,…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Interviews, College Faculty
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Frank, Toya Jones – Journal for Multicultural Education, 2018
Purpose: This study aims to highlight the perspectives of one black male middle-school mathematics teacher, Chris Andrews, about developing black students' positive mathematics identities during his first year of teaching middle-school mathematics in a predominately black school. The author's and Chris Andrews' shared experiences as black…
Descriptors: African American Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Middle School Teachers, Self Concept
O'Neal, Tina S. – ProQuest LLC, 2018
This study uses survey data to assess the influences of Common Core State Standards on teacher self-efficacy. Participants in this study included African-American teachers (who taught at least one special education student) from an online network that hosts approximately 153,000 members from across the United States. A convenience sample of 156…
Descriptors: Common Core State Standards, Self Efficacy, Educational Practices, Learning Disabilities
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Holly, James, Jr. – Journal of Pre-College Engineering Education Research, 2021
Engineering educators must consider how the cultural backgrounds of students coincide (or diverge) with the epistemological and ontological formation of an engineer. Hence, this work is presented as an exhortation to engineering educators, particularly in a precollege context, to critically evaluate how race-conscious pedagogies can be exerted in…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Student Characteristics, Teaching Methods, African American Students
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Nyachae, Tiffany M. – Gender and Education, 2016
Millennial Black women teachers wrestle with two simultaneous burdens: disrupting the racist and sexist status quo of schooling through curriculum, and employing tactics to survive school politics among their majority White women colleagues. This article describes how the "Sisters of Promise" (SOP) curriculum aligned with Black feminism…
Descriptors: African American Teachers, Feminism, Curriculum Development, Females
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