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Bass, Christopher K.; Coleman, Hardin L. K. – Professional School Counseling, 1997
Describes a school-based, Afrocentric program that prepares African American males to use the educational opportunities available to them. Discusses the program's theoretical premises and offers a report on program effectiveness. Looks at cultural issues, methodology, program design, and outlines the importance of this type of program. (RJM)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Afrocentrism, Black Students, Children
Anselmi, Sheri M.; Peters, Daniel B. – 1995
The cultural compatibility hypothesis suggests that black children attending an Afrocentric school (the culturally compatible condition) should have more positive outcomes, as indicated by ethnic identity, future expectations, and optimism, than black adolescents in a mainstream school (cultural incompatibility condition). Adolescents from an…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Afrocentrism, Black Students, Context Effect

Banks, Reginald; Hogue, Aaron; Liddle, Howard; Timberlake, Terri – Journal of Negro Education, 1996
Compared the effectiveness for inner-city African-American youth (n=64) of two social-skills training curricula focusing on problem solving, anger management, and conflict resolution. Both the Afrocentric curriculum and the one that was merely culturally relevant yielded similar decreases in anger and increases in assertiveness and self-control.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Afrocentrism, Black Students, Cultural Awareness
Thompson, Bernida – 1992
This practicum was an 8-month project designed to improve the motivational level and academic success of African American middle school boys through high-interest and activity-based Africentric lessons. The goal was to motivate black middle school males to strive for academic excellence. This goal was necessary in order to eliminate the problem of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adolescents, African Studies, Afrocentrism