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Dan Reynolds; Brianna Rae Kemper; Kristin Collette – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2025
While adolescent foundational skills interventions can be critical levers for reading improvement, district leaders, teachers, and researchers must make complex decisions about how to evaluate their effectiveness in context. In this discussion article, we explore three issues and tensions we experienced during a 2-year research-practice…
Descriptors: Research and Development, Theory Practice Relationship, Urban Areas, School Districts
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
National Council of Teachers of English, 2021
Given continuing myths and misconceptions in the media and in the nation's schools about the language many African American students use, the Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) believes the public deserves a statement reflective of the viewpoints of language and literacy scholars on Ebonics. The variety of Ebonics spoken by…
Descriptors: African American Students, Language Usage, Black Dialects, Negative Attitudes
Banks, Joy; Gibson, Simone – Reading & Writing Quarterly, 2019
Researchers have revisited the influence of African American English many times within extant scholarship over the past 4 decades. However, the resulting pedagogical developments within teacher training programs are inadequate. Through a survey of literature of relevant topics, this article provides a framework regarding training for preservice…
Descriptors: Special Education, Preservice Teacher Education, Black Dialects, African American Students
Baker-Bell, April – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2020
This essay asserts the importance for English/Language Arts educators to become conversant with the features of Black Language and the cultural and historical foundations of this speech genre as a rule-bound, grammatically consistent pattern of speech. These features go beyond grammar to include such conventions as a reliance on storytelling as a…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Black Dialects, Language Patterns, Grammar
Walker, Brenda L. Townsend – Middle School Journal, 2020
Historically, middle grade schools doled out the harshest and most exclusionary discipline to adolescent African American males. African American males were routed along school to prison pathways at rates higher than African American females and their peers from other racial backgrounds. National conversations about exclusionary discipline…
Descriptors: Females, African American Students, Discipline, Middle School Students
Tanji Reed Marshall – English Journal, 2018
This article raises the reality of English as a naturally variant and fluid language inseparable from culture. The author addresses the tensions teachers face in the classroom when they make decisions about how African American students should use their language.
Descriptors: African American Students, Language Usage, Black Dialects, Cultural Influences
Beneke, Margaret; Cheatham, Gregory A. – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2015
A large percentage of young children entering preschool are English speakers who speak a language variety that often differs from the English dialect expected by educators within early childhood programs. While African American English (AAE) is one of the most widely recognized English dialects in the United States, the use of AAE in schools and…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Preschool Children, Inclusion, Equal Education
Boutte, Gloria Swindler; Earick, Mary E.; Jackson, Tambra O. – Theory Into Practice, 2021
We explore the disconnect between education policy and culturally sustaining instruction, curriculum, discipline, and assessment for African American Language (AAL) Learners. Framing the omission of language policies as linguistic violence and anti-Black linguistic racism, we discuss antecedent and contemporary educational language policies and…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, African Americans, African American Culture, Racial Bias
Green, David – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2017
Given that research in language and literacy studies proffers multilingual and translingual literacy studies as central to contemporary English studies, English studies can benefit from increased attention to hip-hop language practices. While some linguists have argued for closer analysis of hip-hop nation language (HHNL) because of its relevance…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Popular Culture, English, North American English
Johnson, Lamar L.; Bryan, Nathaniel; Boutte, Gloria – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2019
In the wake of racial violence in urban schools and society, we question, "Can the field of urban education love blackness and Black lives unconditionally and as preconditions to humanity? What does it look like to (re)imagine urban classrooms as sites of love? As educators, how might we utilize a pedagogy of love as an embodied practice that…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Violence, Urban Schools, Urban Education
Hill, Joseph C. – Sign Language Studies, 2017
The article discusses the importance of sociohistorical context which is the foundation of variation studies in sociolinguistics. The studies on variation in spoken and signed languages are reviewed with the discussion of geographical and social aspects which are treated as external factors in the formation and maintenance of dialects and those…
Descriptors: Sociolinguistics, Language Variation, Black Dialects, Sign Language
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
Lee, Alice Y.; Handsfield, Lara J. – Reading Teacher, 2018
Classrooms act as linguistic sieves when they continue to accept only dominant forms of English as the "correct" and "appropriate" language choice for all students. Students who speak other languages, such as African American Language or Spanish, are often encouraged to use those languages on the playground or at home but not…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Second Language Learning, Language Usage, Native Language
Jamila Lyiscott – English Journal, 2017
The author explores the racial and cultural ideologies that inform what it means to be Black in the United States and how this mainstream framing of Blackness intersects with teacher preparedness to engage Black textual expressions in the classroom.
Descriptors: Racial Identification, African Americans, Cultural Influences, Racial Factors