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Cookie R. Garrett – ProQuest LLC, 2023
For too long, the debate about Ebonics has been about the validity of the language and not about how the perception of the language impacts those that speak it. Ebonics has been considered inappropriate and inadequate as a language in institutions of higher education since the moment Black people in the United States were allowed access. However,…
Descriptors: College Students, Black Dialects, Language Usage, Blacks
Hudley, Anne H. Charity; Mallinson, Christine; Bucholtz, Mary – Teachers College Press, 2022
"Talking College" shows that language is fundamental to Black and African American culture and that linguistic justice is crucial to advancing racial justice, both on college campuses and throughout society. Writing from a linguistics-informed, Black-centered educational framework, the authors draw extensively on Black college students'…
Descriptors: Blacks, African American Students, Black Dialects, Language Usage
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Taylor Lewis; Jenni Eaton – Across the Disciplines, 2024
Research has long claimed that rubrics provide the objective, fair, and equitable means by which to assess student writing. Recent moves in writing programs and composition classrooms have acknowledged the ways that writing assessment perpetuates linguistic violence, and shifts towards anti-racist assessment practices have ushered in grading…
Descriptors: Scoring Rubrics, Equal Education, Writing Evaluation, Faculty Development