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Alexander, Clara Franklin – Reading Teacher, 1980
An overview of Black dialects, with suggestions for teaching students who speak in Black dialects. (RL)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Class Activities, Elementary Secondary Education

Hoover, Mary Rhodes – Journal of Negro Education, 1998
Lists 30 resources that provide essential background information, research findings, examples from the field, and recommendations for practice for teachers of students who speak Ebonics. (SLD)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Educational Resources, Language Arts
Lewis, Warren W. – Indiana English, 1994
Explains some of the difficulties encountered in teaching African American adults at Martin University. States that many of the students the author taught were poorly prepared for higher education. Discusses language differences between white Americans and African Americans. Argues that IQ tests are poor measures of intelligence. Defines andragogy…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Andragogy, Black Dialects, Black Students
Christian, Donna – 1997
This digest discusses the different dialects children bring to the school environment and how U.S. schools deal with these differences. Reference is made to the Ann Arbor (Michigan) case in which a group of African-American parents sued the local school system on behalf of their children, claiming the school was denying their children equal…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Dialects, Educational Policy

Denson, Marquita D. – English in Texas, 1995
Explains how teachers might go about equitably and fairly teaching standard written English when African American students in the class speak black English. Argues that black English, which has been 400 years in the making, is worthy of tolerance and respect for all its richness. (TB)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction
Ginn, Doris O. – 1975
It is argued in this paper that teachers must develop an awareness of the historical implications of the black dialect. A sample in-class composition written in black dialect is quoted in its entirety and analyzed, and a personal writing approach is described. The first part of the approach deals with structure, and a linguistic method is used for…
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black Dialects, Black Education, Black Students
Jones, J. Arthur – 1990
This paper is a critical review of Eleanor Orr's theory that African American students have difficulty with mathematical and scientific concepts because they speak Black English. Orr's data are criticized on many levels. For instance, her facts are derived from a limited subject pool and she has failed to take into account other possible reasons…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Education, Black Students, Educational Quality

Reed, Daisy F. – English Journal, 1983
Recounts how a teacher used herself as a model to motivate black students to speak standard English. (JL)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, English, High Schools
Bondurant, Slettie Vera – Freedomways, 1973
Argues that since the black child is handicapped not so much by a lack of reading skills but more by certain phonic sounds he is forced to memorize, black language will not aid him in learning English. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Early Experience, English Instruction

Johnson, Kenneth R. – English Record, 1971
Illustrates the difficulty encountered when disadvantaged black children are taught reading by conventional methods--by identifying some conflict points between nonstandard Negro dialect and Standard English. These cause no problem if they are simply disregarded in the teaching of reading. (JM)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Disadvantaged Youth, Language Role
Politzer, Robert L.; Lewis, Shirley A.R. – 1978
The second phase of a three-part research and development plan, this study investigated the relationship between teacher performance on the Black English Tests for Teachers (TTBE) and specified sets of teacher behaviors and pupil achievement as measured by curriculum-specific tests in language arts. The study involved 27 teachers from two schools…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Black Dialects, Black Students, Educational Research

Bountress, Nicholas G. – Preventing School Failure, 1994
This article examines differences between language deficits and language differences, with emphasis on African American students from lower socioeconomic levels, and considers intervention with this population in terms of why it should occur, when it should occur, and how it should be structured. An appendix summarizes dialectical features of…
Descriptors: Bidialectalism, Black Dialects, Black Students, Elementary Secondary Education
Perry, Theresa, Ed.; Delpit, Lisa, Ed. – 1998
The recent discussions about the teaching of Black English, known as Ebonics, in the Oakland (California) school district have highlighted concerns about the right way to educate African American children. The authors of essays in this collection offer background history that explores the race and power dynamics surrounding the development of…
Descriptors: Bidialectalism, Black Culture, Black Dialects, Black Students
Fasold, Ralph W., Ed.; Shuy, Roger W., Ed. – 1970
There are three approaches to the nonstandard dialects of Negro inner-city children: eradication; biloquialism, sometimes called functional bidialectism; and appreciation of dialect differences with no attempt to change speech patterns. The essays in the present volume are all written from the biloquialist point of view, which advocates that…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Black Dialects, Black Students, Contrastive Linguistics

Foster, Michele; Peele, Tryphenia – Education and Urban Society, 1999
Examined a staff-development program in a large urban California school district that exposed participants to African-American culture and features of African-American English. Preliminary findings for 32 teachers show that they easily incorporate display, ritual, and situated enactment into their teaching but have not made many other…
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black Dialects, Black Students, Context Effect
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