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Jenkins, Toby S.; Boutte, Gloria; Wynter-Hoyte, Kamania – Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
In this essay, we center hip-hop culture and Black cultural legacies. We envision and offer a two-fold framework which illuminates the intersection between the two. We explore ways that the Black cultural experience (or better yet Black cultural praxis) has always brilliantly and organically demonstrated the shape and form of a scholarship of…
Descriptors: African American Culture, Popular Culture, Freedom, African Culture
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Tangwa, Godfrey B.; Munung, Nchangwi Syntia – Research Ethics, 2020
COVID-19 is a very complex pandemic. It has affected individuals, different countries and regions of the world equally in some senses and differently in other senses. While sub-Saharan Africa has weathered a range of outbreaks of emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases, the manner in which the COVID-19 pandemic has evolved necessitates some…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, African Culture
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Teague, Latoya – Journal of Children's Literature, 2021
Educators and librarians have a responsibility to capture the transnational border-crossing experiences of all students, including children of the African diaspora. Narratives of African diaspora border crossings disrupt stories of linear migration. These stories feature histories of displacement, trauma, and unbelonging. And yet, they embrace…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Immigration, Immigrants, Trauma
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Willis, Arlette Ingram – Literacy Research: Theory, Method, and Practice, 2023
The Library of Congress has acquired the Omar ibn Said Collection, including an exceptional artifact, the autobiography of Omar ibn Said, written in ancient Arabic by an African enslaved man. In this article, I analytically examine the role of literacy in Omar ibn Said's life as informed by African cultures, ethnicities, histories, languages, and…
Descriptors: Literacy, Authors, Arabic, Autobiographies
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Edwards, Kirsten T. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2023
Critical race studies in international higher education remains on the margins. More so are analyses of Black subjects (nations, institutions, people, etc.) and/or knowledge traditions. In particular, there remains a dearth of research centering Black subjects as not only the unit of analysis, but also agents in the internationalization of higher…
Descriptors: Black Studies, Critical Race Theory, Research, Higher Education
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Tabi, Emmanuel – Peabody Journal of Education, 2021
The narratives presented in this article speak to the lived experiences of an Afrodiasporic activist: an educator and spoken word poet named Efe. Efe mobilized his talents to support racialized youths as they navigated the complex and often difficult social context of Toronto, Canada. Efe also used his cultural production to speak to his own…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Blacks, Racial Bias, Activism
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Gerencheal, Berhane; Mishra, Deepanjali – Online Submission, 2019
The beginning of the modern education and the introduction of the foreign languages in Ethiopia are the two faces of a single coin. And this paper mainly shows how and when foreign languages are introduced into Ethiopia following the footsteps of the introduction and expansion of modern education. It is done using secondary sources. It also gives…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Second Language Learning, Second Languages, English (Second Language)
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Miriam Weidl; Friederike Lüpke; Alpha Naby Mané; Jérémi Fahed Sagna – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2023
In recent (socio)linguistic research there is a growing awareness that rural, small-scale multilingualism as the most widespread communicative setting across the globe. Yet, literacy programmes accepting and incorporating this diversity are non-existent. LILIEMA is a unique educational programme currently based in Senegal that addresses the need…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, African Languages, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Mullens, Neoma – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2021
The influence of Western ideologies in Ghanaian higher education is undeniable and scholars have long called for a reframing of higher education policies to reflect the desires, culture, and institutions of Africa. Using a historical and reflective narrative approach, this article explores institutional identity within the higher education context…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, African Culture, Institutional Characteristics
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Garry, Josh – Teaching History, 2021
Josh Garry describes his effort to refresh his approach to teaching the British transatlantic slave trade. Drawing on reading, lectures and discussions during an Historical Association Teacher Fellowship programme, Garry built a sequence of lessons designed to contextualise the trade while showing African agency and complexity. The result was a…
Descriptors: African Culture, Foreign Countries, History Instruction, Fellowships
Barnes, Nailah Reine – Liberal Education, 2020
When the author looked back at her first two years at Spelman, a historically Black liberal arts college for women, she can see that the African Diaspora and the World (ADW) program had been paramount to her development as a culturally competent scholar with a nuanced understanding of systemic racism. In the majority-White schools she attended for…
Descriptors: College Students, African American Students, African American History, College Curriculum
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Mikateko Mathebula; Carmen Martinez-Vargas – Journal of Student Affairs in Africa, 2023
Universities in South Africa have the potential to advance various dimensions of human development, including well-being. However, this potential can be constrained by historical processes of oppression and the negation of indigenous ways of being and doing. Applying the capabilities approach (Sen, 1999) as a normative framework for the outcomes…
Descriptors: African Culture, Universities, Well Being, Longitudinal Studies
Jorgensen, Robyn; Graven, Mellony – Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia, 2022
In this paper we reflect on our combined work in some of the most marginalised educational contexts in the Southern Hemisphere. We draw on the work of Bourdieu to frame the paper. We propose the working in marginalised education settings requires a particular habitus or way of being to be able to play the research game. Underpinning our approach…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged, Social Capital, Cultural Capital, African Culture
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Dillard, Cynthia B. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2020
As teachers in the US context, we have spent precious little time considering what it would mean to be prepared and ready for Black children. In such readiness, (re)cognition of the spirit and spirituality of Black people would be central in understanding and preparing for our children and families. This article asks the question: What would it…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Blacks, Elementary Schools, Cultural Influences
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Ford, Donna Y.; Middleton, Tanya J.; Hines, Erik M.; Fletcher, Edward C., Jr.; Moore, James L., III – Gifted Child Today, 2023
This article focuses on what school-based mental health counselors need to know to be anti-racist and culturally responsive for Black students, while recognizing that many of the presented theories and frameworks have implications for other minoritized gifted and talented (GATE) students/clients. The authors provide an overview of the most…
Descriptors: African American Students, Academically Gifted, School Counselors, Mental Health
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