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Showing 46 to 60 of 103 results Save | Export
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Deacon, R.; Osman, R.; Buchler, M. – South African Journal of Higher Education, 2009
This article reports on findings pertaining to education scholarship in higher education drawn from a wider study on all education research in South Africa from 1995 to 2006. After briefly outlining pertinent aspects of the wider study, it offers a preliminary and descriptive account of what were found to be primary research themes in higher…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Prior Learning, Foreign Countries, Educational Research
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Watkins, William H. – Review of Educational Research, 2008
This integrative review uses two of Asa Grant Hilliard's books, "SBA: The Reawakening of the African Mind" and "The Maroon Within Us: Selected Essays on African American Community Socialization", to discuss aspects of his scholarly legacy in teaching, history, and psychology. His scholarship is provocative. Hilliard rejected the supremacy of the…
Descriptors: African American Community, Biographies, Profiles, Scholarship
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Shockley, Kmt G. – Journal of Negro Education, 2007
This article explicates the literature on cultural reattachment Africentric education. Cultural reattachment is a process whereby people of African descent begin to adopt (in whole or in part) aspects of an African culture (e.g., Wolof or Akan). Africentric education is defined as the adoption of Africentric ideology and cultural relevancy.…
Descriptors: African Culture, Cultural Influences, Black Studies, Afrocentrism
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Williams, Carmen Braun – Journal of Counseling & Development, 2005
Multicultural counseling theories, developed over the last 35 years, have elucidated the experiences of marginalized populations--women, people of color, gay men and lesbians, working-class people, people with disabilities, and other stigmatized groups--within a sociopolitical context that is embedded with negative messages about their worth.…
Descriptors: Females, African Americans, Counseling, Counseling Theories
Binder, Amy J. – 2002
This book compares two groups of citizens who challenged U.S. public school curricula in the 1980s and identities striking similarities between proponents of Afrocentrism and creationism, accounts for differential outcomes, and draws conclusions for the study of culture, organizations, and social movements. The chapters are (1) Introduction to…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Creationism, Curriculum, Educational History
Wortham, Anne – Executive Educator, 1992
Afrocentrism terms the pluralistic experience of modern society dislocating and disruptive. Afrocentrists would reimpose a solidarity and cohesion that the ethnic communities cannot themselves maintain. Advocates discredit the content and universality of Western civilization by liberating students from rationality, the scientific method, economic…
Descriptors: African Studies, Afrocentrism, Blacks, Elementary Secondary Education
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Armstrong, Ketra L. – Journal of Black Psychology, 2005
This study examined Black students' cognitive and affective responses to race of messenger and cultural content of message as Afrocentric communication stimuli. The sample consisted of 127 Black students (89 in the experimental group and 38 in the control group). Results of a 2 X 2 factorial MANOVA design indicated minimal yet significant main…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Afrocentrism, Interpersonal Communication, Student Attitudes
Asante, Molefi Kete – Executive Educator, 1992
African Americans are dislocated people whose formal education leads them away from themselves. One way to progress toward a multicultural curriculum is through Afrocentric curriculum. Afrocentricity in education means viewing the African-American as a subject of history not as an object in someone else's experiences. For example, African-American…
Descriptors: African Studies, Afrocentrism, Curriculum Design, Elementary Secondary Education
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Kelly, Shalonda – Measurement and Evaluation in Counseling and Development, 2004
Underlying pro- and anti-Black components accounted for significant variance in various racial scale scores among African Americans (N = 224). Intercorrelations for individual racial scale scores were consistent with theory and accounted for significant variance in psychological distress scores in patterns consistent with their representation of a…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Rating Scales, Racial Attitudes, African Americans
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Cokley, Kevin O. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 2005
A survey of the literature reveals that there is conceptual confusion and inconsistent and sometimes inappropriate usage of the terms racial identity, ethnic identity, and Afrocentric values. This study explored the extent to which Black racial(ized) identity attitudes were related to ethnic identity and Afrocentric cultural values. Two hundred…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Values, Multivariate Analysis, Ethnicity
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Donelan, Richard W. – International Journal of Educational Reform, 1993
Africentric ideas about leaders and leadership have remained part of the African Diaspora's cultural underpinnings over time. Slavery experiences predispose the African-American community to reject strong, natural leadership. This article and accompanying poem recount stories about the African-American experience and profile some true leaders.…
Descriptors: African Culture, Afrocentrism, Blacks, Democratic Values
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Garth, Phyllis Ham – Thresholds in Education, 1994
Classifies and discusses Afrikana women's feminism within the following categories: Black Feminism, Womanism, and Afrikana Womanism. Clearly, the mainstream Euroamerican conceptualization of feminism is an inappropriate framework to address the concerns and issues of Afrikana womanism. Privileged Eurofeminists have failed to acknowledge Afrikana…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Blacks, Elementary Secondary Education, Feminism
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Reed, W. Edward; Lawson, Erma J.; Gibbs, Tyson – Western Journal of Black Studies, 1997
Extends the discussion of what some scholars believe is a controversial and impractical philosophy, that of Afrocentrism, in the context of the post-civil rights era. The article draws on the works of three scholars of Afrocentricity as a philosophical movement: (1) Gerald Early; (2) Stanley Crouch; and (3) Molefi Asante. (SLD)
Descriptors: African Culture, Afrocentrism, Black Culture, Cultural Awareness
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Lefkowitz, Mary – Society, 1994
Examines the methods James uses to establish the misleading thesis that African peoples made the original discoveries that led to the development of what has been thought of as Western thought. Hypothesis is treated as virtual fact, and history is misrepresented. "Stolen Legacy" is not a serious work of scholarship. (SLD)
Descriptors: African History, Afrocentrism, Black Culture, Black History
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Asante, Molefi Kete – Educational Leadership, 1991
Most teachers do not realize that an African-American or a Hispanic person has had to experience the death of his/her own culture to master white cultural information. By centering or empowering their students of color, teachers can reduce feelings of dislocation engendered by our society's predominantly "white self-esteem" curricula.…
Descriptors: African Culture, Afrocentrism, Black Studies, Blacks
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