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Maiya A. Turner; Miriam Sanders – Journal of Urban Learning, Teaching, and Research, 2024
Foundational principles of formal math language in mathematics classrooms are necessary for students' ability to succeed academically. However, cultural dialects such as Black language are vilified within the scope of education, particularly in mathematics education, despite evidence that acknowledging students' cultural and linguistic backgrounds…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, African American Students, Language Usage, Black Dialects
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Nguyen, Yen H. – Communication Center Journal, 2021
At the University of North Carolina Greensboro's Speaking Center, recent formation of an Antiracist Values Committee, as well as former research completed by its members, have governed antiracist efforts. As one resource to students, the University of North Carolina Greensboro's Speaking Center offers tip sheets. These tip sheets are pamphlets…
Descriptors: Academic Support Services, Communication (Thought Transfer), Racial Bias, Social Justice
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McMurtry, Teaira – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2021
This article makes a case for why Black Language (BL) must be a part of teachers' conceptualizations of multilingualism in U.S. contexts. BL is a living linguistic legacy, an embodiment of Black culture, and much more than simply a list of distinct grammatical features. For teachers to move toward dispositions and language and literacy pedagogical…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Multilingualism, African American Culture, Teaching Methods
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Frieson, Brittany L. – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2022
This paper draws on qualitative research that examines the biliteracy practices of Black Language (BL) speakers in an elementary, two-way immersion (TWI), dual-language bilingual program, using Raciolinguistics as a theoretical lens. Specific questions that guided the study addressed the features of communicative contexts where BL was utilized and…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Bilingualism, Immersion Programs, Linguistics
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Hollman, Deirdre Lynn – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
This article seeks to explore the complexities of Black subjectivities as written and illustrated by comic book creators of color who wrestle with the enigmatic qualities of blackness as they write within and beyond racial imaginaries and social realities. I call these works "critical race comics" to highlight their explicit engagement…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Race, Cartoons, Illustrations
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McKinney, Emry; Hoggan, Chad – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2022
For educators committed to promoting social equity, the question of how to address dialect hegemony is increasingly important. While linguists have long accepted the concept of dialect equality, educators have struggled with the issue, sparking a history of controversy and debate underscoring larger social issues of diversity and equity. For…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Nonstandard Dialects, Standard Spoken Usage, Teaching Methods
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Young, Vershawn Ashanti – Journal of College Reading and Learning, 2020
This article analyzes several online performances from the Black Lives Matter movement for the ways they utilize and blend standard academic literacies and African American rhetoric. These performances are discussed as pedagogies of possibility that meet and exceed the common core standards. This talk also points up the crucial roles that racial…
Descriptors: African Americans, Social Justice, Literacy, Code Switching (Language)
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Richardson, Elaine; Ragland, Alice – Community Literacy Journal, 2018
Tis paper examines the language, literacies, communicative, and rhetorical practices of the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement. The work pays attention to the communication practices of the BLM and Hip Hop generation in its extension of Black and African American language traditions and prior liberation movements in their unapologetic performance…
Descriptors: African Americans, Social Action, Activism, Language Usage
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Foster, Michèle; Halliday, Leah; Baize, Jonathan; Chisholm, James – Multicultural Perspectives, 2020
Michèle was hurrying to class. How, she thought, could she offer the students in her African American English in Society and Schools class a method of understanding, comparing, and abstracting the studies they had been reading in class? The heuristic described in this study evolved from a desire to capture aspects of several seminal studies that…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Heuristics, African American Students, Social Justice
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Dover, Alison G.; Henning, Nick; Agarwal-Rangnath, Ruchi; Dotson, Erica K. – Multicultural Perspectives, 2018
As social justice-oriented teachers and teacher educators, it can seem as if we are fighting a losing battle against neoliberal education policies designed to disrupt and dismantle our field. In this article we draw upon traditions of critical race theory, counterstorying, and critical hope to examine the complex realities of contemporary teacher…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Faculty Development, Teacher Educators, Neoliberalism
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Williams, Bonnie J. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2013
The 1974 Conference on College Composition and Communication's (CCCC) resolution declaring "Students' Right to Their Own Language" (SRTOL) defends the rights of students and all other writers to use different varieties of English (see Committee on CCCC Language Statement, 1974). In addition, the 1988 CCCC adoption of the National…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Teaching Methods, Language Usage, Language Variation
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Carpenter Ford, Amy – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2013
African American youth have been disciplined and dismissed from classrooms for engaging in culturally-based communication practices that teachers misinterpret and perceive as disruptive. Teachers have significant power in how they communicate with their students. White teachers should be especially aware of this power because misunderstandings…
Descriptors: Social Justice, African American Students, Ethnography, Teaching Methods
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DoBell, Daniel C. – Journal of Negro Education, 2008
Thirty years after its publication, Geneva Smitherman's seminal work, "Talkin and Testifyin" continues to influence scholars, policymakers and practitioners. This article takes a look at Smitherman's work by first providing an overview of the sociolinguistic theoretical foundations that led to its publication. This is followed by a reception…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Black Dialects, Recognition (Achievement), Academic Discourse
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Smith, J. Elspeth S. – Writing Instructor, 2011
In this essay, the author discusses her journey from her first year of the PhD program at USC, and the work she is doing now for a company that builds infrastructure in Afghanistan. She explores the ways in which studies for her 1985 PhD in Rhetoric, Linguistics and Literature did and did not prepare her for the work she does now. Her memoir…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Experience, Females, Expectation
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Watkins, Audrey P. – International Journal of Whole Schooling, 2008
This work addresses the politics of speech and language communication with respect to Africans in the Diaspora in Jamaica and in the United States of America. Language hegemony is an expression of the power and control sustained by means of institutions such as schools. Depending on their linguistic choices or situational language use, post…
Descriptors: Social Justice, African Culture, Linguistics, Foreign Countries