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Claerbaut, David – 1972
This book discusses the special jargon used by black people in the United States. In the first two chapters the author, a white man, discusses his personal experiences with the black community in order to establish an argument for the need for more awareness of what black jargon is and how it is used. Chapter three proposes that standard English…
Descriptors: Black Attitudes, Black Culture, Black Dialects, Black Studies
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hall, Perry A. – Black Scholar, 1997
Explores the debate over the teaching of black English in the public schools. Often ignored is that proponents of the recognition of black English have almost always advocated supporting standard English by using approaches that take black English into account. The reason for recognizing Ebonics is usually to implement strategies for teaching…
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black Dialects, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education
Walker, Sheila – Black World, 1971
Fundamental premise in this article is that black English," the idiom of black Americans, is a separate but equal" dialect of the English language. (DM)
Descriptors: Black Attitudes, Black Culture, Black Dialects, Black History
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Lippi-Green, Rosina – Black Scholar, 1997
Argues that definition of African American vernacular English is essential for linguists and for nonlinguists who define the language based on their personal relationships to the sociocultural matrix in which it is embedded. There is a need to resolve conflicts about the use of black English in the face of the complexity of responses toward it.…
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black Dialects, Blacks, Conflict
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ogbu, John U. – American Educational Research Journal, 1999
Describes and explains the sociolinguistic factors that affect the performance of black children speaking standard English. Uses data from a 2-year study of black speech and bidialectalism involving 40 adults and 76 students to show how the black community and its children have difficulty learning proper English because of their incompatible…
Descriptors: Adults, Beliefs, Bidialectalism, Black Culture
Newell, Kavatus R. – 2000
This paper offers a brief but comprehensive overview of various issues pertaining to the use and origins of Black English. The purpose of the paper is to help educators understand Black English and celebrate this dialect in class while facilitating the acquisition of Standard English. It holds that Ebonics is a dialect of English with its own set…
Descriptors: Bidialectalism, Black Culture, Black Dialects, Blacks
Allen, Walter R. – 1976
The unjustified assumption that black children have limited verbal or articulation skills stems from the fact that blacks use figurative, nonliteral, and nonstandard language in the classroom. The language that most disadvantaged blacks learn at home and bring to the classroom is a restricted form born out of poverty and limited exposure to good…
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black Dialects, Black Education, Disadvantaged Youth
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
McWhorter, John H. – Black Scholar, 1997
"Ebonics II" is the position that there is no significant gap between black and standard English but that teaching standard English as a foreign language would alleviate the stigma attached to black English. Acknowledging black English and promoting Afrocentric curricula while teaching standard English would overcome the resistance many children…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Black Culture, Black Dialects, Cultural Differences
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Doss, Richard C.; Gross, Alan M. – Journal of Black Psychology, 1994
When 130 African American college students were asked to rate the likability and desirability as a committee work partner of black-English-speaking, code-switching, or standard-English-speaking voices, they tended to prefer the speaker of standard English. Implications are discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black Dialects, Black Students, Code Switching (Language)
LABOV, WILLIAM – 1967
IN CONNECTION WITH RESEARCH INTO THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN STANDARD ENGLISH AND THE NONSTANDARD DIALECTS OF THE URBAN GHETTOS, IT WAS FOUND THAT THERE IS A DIFFERENCE IN THE RELATIVE DEPTH OR ABSTRACTNESS OF THE UNCONSCIOUS GRAMMATICAL RULES. IN MEMORY OR "SHADOW" TESTS, GROUPS OF NEGRO BOYS FROM 10 TO 14 YEARS OLD WERE HIGHLY MOTIVATED TO…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Black Culture, Black Dialects, Black Education