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Bradley, Carla R. – Family Journal: Counseling and Therapy for Couples and Families, 1998
This brief review of the writings and research of African-American child-rearing experts provides a synopsis of the rich assortment of information available to the counseling profession. The most salient theme is that of firm discipline to prepare children for an often antagonistic environment. (EMK)
Descriptors: African Culture, Black Culture, Black Family, Blacks
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Adeyemi, Michael B.; Adeyinka, Augustus A. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2003
The type of education prevalent in Africa before the coming of Western civilisation was generally known as African traditional education or indigenous education of the various communities. Most recent works on new perspectives in African education, vis-a-vis the role and impact of Christian missions from the West include those of Coetzee and Roux…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Principles, African Culture, Christianity
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Harmer, Bonnie – Journal of Women in Educational Leadership, 2005
Born in Jamaica in 1805, Mary Seacole (nee Grant), was the daughter of a Black Creole boarding house owner and a Scottish Army officer. Like many Creole doctress women, Seacole was taught African herbal medicine arts from her mother. In addition to understanding traditional herbal medicine, she gleaned an understanding of Western medicine from the…
Descriptors: Nurses, Creoles, Medicine, African Culture
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Loewy, Michael I.; Williams, DiAnna Toliver; Keleta, Aster – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 2002
The Kaffa ceremony is a unique, culturally appropriate, group counseling intervention for female East African refugees. A counseling group is described in which the Kaffa ceremony was instrumental in helping to bridge the gap between Western counseling and East African culture, providing a context for the group members to resolve long-held trauma.…
Descriptors: Intervention, Ceremonies, Refugees, African Culture
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McCreary, Micah L.; Young, Jessica J.; Jones, Monica Y.; Pasquariello, Cassandra D.; Fife, John E.; Grosz, Erin; Stewart, Nina; Desmangles, Janice – Journal of Instructional Psychology, 2011
The current article presents a model of a summer and after-school psychoeducational intervention for children ages 4 to 11 and parents offered at an African American church. The IMPPACT program may be best described as a community-based program that applies salient dimensions of African American religiosity and cultural values to the cultivation…
Descriptors: Intervention, Self Efficacy, Outcomes of Education, Psychoeducational Methods
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Hughey, Matthew W. – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2008
In this article the author explores the controversial thesis that African American Collegiate Fraternities and Sororities, also known as Black Greek Letter Organizations (BGLOs), are "educated gangs". First, the author examines this polemic as a "truth claim" and compares BGLOs and gangs through: (1) hazing; (2) rape and substance abuse; (3)…
Descriptors: African American Students, Sororities, Fraternities, Racial Bias
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Harrington, Ellen F.; Crowther, Janis H.; Shipherd, Jillian C. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2010
Objective: The primary goal of this study was to test a culturally specific model of binge eating in African American female trauma survivors, investigating potential mechanisms through which trauma exposure and distress were related to binge eating symptomatology. Method: Participants were 179 African American female trauma survivors who…
Descriptors: Eating Disorders, Inhibition, Questionnaires, Path Analysis
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Lensmire, Timothy J.; Snaza, Nathan – Educational Researcher, 2010
Research on the racial identities of White future teachers has assumed and circulated an overly simplified, and ultimately unhelpful, conception of White racial identity. An alternative is needed, which the authors develop with reference to scholarship that explores White people's participation in blackface minstrelsy. They argue that at the core…
Descriptors: Racial Identification, Teacher Education, Professional Development, Teacher Student Relationship
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Laird, Siobhan E. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2006
This paper, originally given as an address to an African audience of students and academics, examines the functions of education in Africa and argues that the western-oriented approach at tertiary level is injurious to the intellectual development of students. It sets out an analysis of the processes at work in the University of Ghana which…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Intellectual Development, Social Work, Higher Education
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Carter-Black, Jan – Journal of Social Work Education, 2007
Social workers serve a varied population. Therefore, exemplary social work practice requires a depth of knowledge and skills that cut across diverse cultural contexts. Because of the universal characteristics of storytelling, this article proposes the use of storytelling as a viable conduit and instructional strategy for teaching cultural…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Social Work, Story Telling, African Americans
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Ng'andu, Joseph; Herbst, Anri – British Journal of Music Education, 2004
This article describes "inshimi"--a musical storytelling practice of the Bemba people in Zambia. It gives a general perspective on the whole practice and some details on the "MUSIC" as contained in the practice. The article further encourages the idea that "inshimi" represents a nucleus of the "MUSIC"…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Story Telling, Music Appreciation, Music Education
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Stadler, Holly A., Ed. – American Mental Health Counselors Association Journal, 1985
Discusses the meaning of counseling from nonwestern perspectives and suggests some considerations for counselors. Discusses cultural differences related to stress, myth and superstition, social change, and social attitudes related to physical and mental health in six cultures. (JAC)
Descriptors: African Culture, Counseling, Counselor Role, Cross Cultural Studies
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Osa, Osayimwense – Reading Teacher, 1987
Notes that the African oral tradition of storytelling is giving way to an expansion of published works for children. (JC)
Descriptors: African Culture, African Literature, Childhood Interests, Children
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Terrell, Francis; And Others – Psychology in the Schools, 1988
Explored the self-concept level of Black adolescents with and without African names, and of their parents, using the Terrell and Taylor Black Ideology Scale and the Coopersmith Self-Esteem Inventory. Adolescents with African names demonstrated significantly higher scores on the Black self-concept scales than did those without African names.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, African Culture, Black Students, Cultural Awareness
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Stewart, James B. – Phylon, 1983
Examines treatment of "double-consciousness" in DuBois' novels in the light of (1) the extent to which it provides Blacks with a vision unavailable to non-Blacks; (2) the nature and strength of cultural ties that bind Blacks together; and (3) the process by which liberation of the Black psyche is achieved. (CMG)
Descriptors: African Culture, Black Attitudes, Black History, Black Literature
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