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Carolyn McKinney – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
Framed by decolonial theory, this paper explores how language and literacy ideologies, including Anglonormativity, or the expectation that children should be proficient in a standardised version of English and are deficient if not, shape language and literacy practices in South African classrooms. While not legitimised, the use of fluid language…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Bilingualism, Ethnography, Decolonization
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Kayira, Jean – Environmental Education Research, 2015
Colonialism goes beyond territorial conquest: it affects one's epistemological stance, worldviews and perceptions. Although most African countries gained independence in the 1960s, the impacts of colonialism continue to be present through modern-day globalization as a form of neocolonialism. Education systems in many countries in southern Africa…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Environmental Education, World Views, African Culture
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Maposa, Marshall Tamuka; Wassermann, Johan – Africa Education Review, 2014
History is one of the five compulsory subjects in Zimbabwe since 2001. This compulsion speaks to the value with which the government regards the subject especially in teaching the youth about the Chimurenga (War of Liberation). The discourses of war have intensified in Zimbabwe since the late 1990s leading to the growth of a historiography of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, History Instruction, Textbooks, African Culture
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Tedam, Prospera – Early Child Development and Care, 2014
The branding of children as "witches", capable of harming others is a widespread practice in some countries in Africa and across the world. There is evidence of this within specific communities and faith groups; however, the extent to which this phenomenon occurs in England is unclear as is the response by childcare professionals,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Children, Child Abuse, African Culture
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Hale, Janice E. – Education and Urban Society, 2016
This article is a review of the literature related to the cognitive, learning, behavioral, and cultural styles of African American children. This is an assessment of the progress that has been made since 1982 when my first book was published. Several flaws in the creation of the science that undergirds learning styles research related to African…
Descriptors: African American Children, Cognitive Style, Measurement Techniques, Academic Achievement
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Burton, Wanda Martin; White, Ashley N.; Knowlden, Adam P. – American Journal of Health Education, 2017
Background: African Americans have the highest age-adjusted rates of obesity at 48.1%. High rates of obesity contribute to the disproportionate share of chronic health conditions. In order to reduce these high rates and achieve health equity, intervention programs must address racial health disparities in culturally meaningful ways. Methods: The…
Descriptors: Intervention, Obesity, African Americans, Chronic Illness
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Khalifa, Muhammad A.; Gooden, Mark Anthony; Davis, James Earl – Review of Educational Research, 2016
Culturally responsive school leadership (CRSL) has become important to research on culturally responsive education, reform, and social justice education. This comprehensive review provides a framework for the expanding body of literature that seeks to make not only teaching, but rather the entire school environment, responsive to the schooling…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Synthesis, Literature Reviews, Leadership Styles
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Whaley, Arthur L.; Noel, La – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2011
Some theories have posited that African American youth are academic underachievers because of sociocultural factors. We label this point of view the cultural incompatibility perspective. Ogbu's oppositional culture theory and Steele's stereotype threat theory are selected as popular examples of this viewpoint. A critical review of the literature…
Descriptors: African American Students, Race, African American Culture, Underachievement
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Whaley, Arthur L.; Noel, La Tonya – Journal of Negro Education, 2012
Several theories suggest that African American culture facilitates academic achievement, but others suggest that identifying with Black culture contributes to the achievement gap by undermining the academic performance among youth. These opposing perspectives are labeled "cultural compatibility theories" and "cultural incompatibility theories,"…
Descriptors: Achievement Gap, African American Culture, Academic Achievement, Cultural Influences
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Henry, Wilma J.; West, Nicole M.; Jackson, Andrea – Journal of College Student Development, 2010
This article explores unique issues regarding the effects of hip-hop culture on the identity development of young Black female college students. Through the lenses of womanist and Black feminist perspectives, the intersecting impact of race and gender are reviewed within the context of the competing influences of hip-hop on Black female identity.…
Descriptors: College Students, Females, Music, Popular Culture
Alexander, E. Curtis – 1982
This paper attempts to set the record straight with regard to the following assumptions: (1) the Africans of the antiquities of Ethiopia and Egypt were black people; and (2) the same black people developed the foundation that provides the basis for the so-called major Western religions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. There are two parts to…
Descriptors: African Culture, African History, Black Influences, Christianity
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Baldwin, Joseph A. – Journal of Black Studies, 1986
Reviews the recent attempts of Black psychologists and social scientists to formulate a conceptual-operational framework for the study of psychological phenomena as they bear on the cultural-survival conditions of Black-African people. Outlines issues and problems in the attempt to define African (Black) psychology and discusses its relation to…
Descriptors: African Culture, Black Studies, Blacks, Definitions
Rey, Alain – Francais dans le Monde, 1982
The overall construction, internal organization, and utility of an inventory of Black African French variants are reviewed and found highly useful. Part of a page is reproduced as an example. (MSE)
Descriptors: African Culture, Blacks, Dialects, Dictionaries
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Smith, Ernie; Crozier, Karen – Western Journal of Black Studies, 1998
Reviews research and opinion about the origin of Ebonics, refutes theories on Ebonics being a black version of English, and characterizes Ebonics as an African-based language in structure and origin, mixed with European words. Contains 51 references. (SLD)
Descriptors: African Culture, Afrocentrism, Black Culture, Black Dialects
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Robinson, Ella – Journal of Black Studies, 1987
Examines some themes in the work of the African surrealist poet, Aime Cesaire. The elements in his poetry are found in the natural world. Filled with tension, his work demonstrates cultural liberation, independence and dignity, and the desire to reclaim nature, salvation, God, and peace. (BJV)
Descriptors: African Culture, Black Literature, Imagery, Literary Criticism
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