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Karenga, Maulana – Journal of Black Studies, 1988
Black Studies is increasingly being shaped and defined for Blacks rather than by Blacks. Black Studies scholars must adopt a position apart from, outside, or in critique of the established paradigm of Eurocentric scholarship, and operate within an Afrocentric historical paradigm. (BJV)
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Black History, Black Students, Black Studies
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Lynn, Marvin; Johnson, Charletta; Hassan, Kamal – Journal of Negro Education, 1999
Examines the pedagogical practices of an exemplary male African American middle school teacher in an affluent neighborhood, discussing principles guiding his efforts to enhance African American students' moral, intellectual, and spiritual development and noting how his emancipatory pedagogies provide a fertile learning ground. This case study…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Black Culture, Black Teachers, Case Studies
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Henry, Annette – Canadian Journal of Education, 1993
Some epistemological issues underpinning alternative conceptualizations of education of children of African descent in Canada are discussed, with reference to the agency and the subjectivity of black female educators. The standard epistemologies must be reshaped to the pedagogical realities of black teachers and students in Canada. (SLD)
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Black History, Black Students, Black Teachers
Malone, Rubie M.; Malone, James A. – 2001
The extent to which African American faculty provide support and mentoring to African American students determines the ease of students' transition to predominantly white colleges. This paper examines the role of both white and African American faculty in responding to the needs of African American students. Two ways that white institutions…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Afrocentrism, Black Culture, Black Students
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Dunn, Frederick – Journal of Negro Education, 1993
The following three African-American philosophical orientations to education have achieved prominence over the years: (1) the accommodationist philosophy of Booker T. Washington; (2) the radical, liberationist approach of W. E. B. DuBois; and (3) the integrationist/desegregationist, reformist philosophy of Charles H. Houston. Each philosophical…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Black Colleges, Black Culture, Black Education
Marshall, Patricia L. – 1991
Schools fail to meet the schooling needs of many nonwhite students. Afrocentricity, a new curricular movement that looks through African eyes, focuses on improving schooling experiences for African-Americans. Some proponents view it as an answer to African-American student underachievement and say it enhances self-esteem, achievement levels,…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Black Students, Black Teachers, Cultural Awareness
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Henry, Annette – Urban Education, 1994
Examines aspects of an African-centered pedagogy that should let children understand their identities as people of African heritage. Data are from an ethnographic study of "liberatory" pedagogy that was used by four black women teachers. Three vignettes illustrate liberatory practice as it explicitly addresses issues that are often…
Descriptors: African Culture, African History, Afrocentrism, Black Students
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Henry, Annette – Journal of Negro Education, 1992
Explores the relationships among family, community, and classroom teaching as they inform the perspectives of African-Canadian women teachers on teaching African-Canadian children. Interviews and observations of five teachers demonstrate how they fight for social justice and the academic achievement of their students. (SLD)
Descriptors: Activism, Affirmative Action, Afrocentrism, Black Teachers