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Husain Lateef; Adrian Gale; Francine Jellesma; Ellie Borgstrom – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2024
Career aspirations are a crucial aspect of future adult development for individuals of all racial and ethnic backgrounds. However, Black emerging adult men may face specific challenges and obstacles that can hinder the formation of career aspirations. Social and economic disadvantages, racism, and development in low-resourced constrained…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Males, Blacks, Values
Karen Hudson; Barb Hamilton-Hinch; Mary Jane Harkins; Zhanna Barchuk; Diana Seselja – Canadian Journal of Education, 2024
In Canada, the Black population is the third-largest racially visible group, yet students of African descent continue to face inequities in Canadian school systems. Students of African descent can benefit from learning from an Africentric perspective that cultivates their well-being and achievement while centring their lived experience as a person…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Blacks, African Culture, High Schools
Grillo, Lisa Maria; Jones, Sosanya; Andrews, Melody; Whitehead, Lyndsie – Educational Foundations, 2022
Black women currently enroll in graduate school programs and earn doctoral degrees at higher rates than all other demographic groups in the United States. Nonetheless, Black women remain noticeably underrepresented in educational leadership positions in public education. Research explorations of Black women who lead in public education primarily…
Descriptors: Blacks, Females, African American Leadership, Afrocentrism
Iruka, Iheoma U.; Musa, Takondwa; Allen, Danielle J. – Theory Into Practice, 2023
For too long, Black children's educational needs have not been prioritized with attention to their culture, language, historical and contemporary racialized experiences, and building their positive racial identity. It is critical that early childhood education settings for young children be transformed to be a place of learning and healing by…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Culturally Relevant Education, Blacks, African American Students
Brant, Jennifer; Webber, Kayla – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
We begin this essay by sharing a bit about our entry points into Black, Indigenous, and Afro-Indigenous feminist solidarities before entering into conversation with Mikki Kendall whose work Hood Feminisms: Notes from the Women that a Movement Forgot inspired the title for this essay and offers important insights for Black and Indigenous feminist…
Descriptors: Blacks, Indigenous Populations, Afrocentrism, Feminism
Amber Caprice Sizemore Davis – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This study explores how Black girls express their "Black girl imagination" while participating in a critical, informal science learning program, Empowering Girls Through Art & Science, designed to prioritize the positive visibility of Black girls and promote the critical exploration of scientific histories. The goal of the research…
Descriptors: Imagination, Females, Science Education, Blacks
A Community within a Community: Collectivism, Social Cohesion and Building a Healthy Black Childhood
Banwo, Bodunrin O. – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2023
This article features in-depth interviews and ethnographic vignettes that explore collectivism, social cohesion, and Black educational leadership as a strategy to infuse liberatory practices in the educational process. The article examines how the social foundation of African-centered ethos of collectivism can shift how marginalized students…
Descriptors: Blacks, Children, African American Leadership, African Americans
Teaira McMurtry – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
America's strength lies in its inherent diversity--an enduring truth that makes the Eurocentric nature of our educational curricula troubling. Despite this foundational reality, curricular materials remain predominantly Eurocentric, often excluding authentic representation and inclusion of Black/African American experiences in children's and young…
Descriptors: Native Language, Language Maintenance, Cultural Context, Cultural Pluralism
Thomas Kpetay, Shakita; Lozenski, Brian D. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2021
Drawing from the histories of nonformal Black education, (Pp)an-Africanist scholarship, and critical qualitative research, this participatory ethnographic study documents an organic conception of public space where Black people, many of whom have been disaffected by traditional public schools, come to teach and learn with each other. The article…
Descriptors: Blacks, Nonformal Education, African Americans, Civil Rights
Ndebele, Njabulo S. – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2016
This essay examines the changing range of descriptors available for black South African experience from the 1960s through to the present and shows the changing implications of "black", "African", "citizen" and "human being", with particular reference to the formative structures of education, and the enabling…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Blacks, Experience, Literature
Jackson, Jarvais; Collins, Saudah N. T.; Baines, Janice R.; Boutte, Gloria Swindler; Johnson, George Lee, Jr.; Folsom-Wright, Nichole – Social Studies, 2021
Africa is the cradle of civilization, yet its rich history and culture is undertaught--especially in elementary P-5 classrooms. In this article, we share Adinkra symbols from West Africa which can be used for interdisciplinary instruction and classroom management. We offer Adinkra symbols as an organizing theme for teaching in the spirit of not…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, African Culture, Teaching Methods, Interdisciplinary Approach
Dei, George J. Sefa – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2018
From a particular vantage point, as an African-born scholar with a politics to affirm my Black subjectivity and Indigeneity in a diasporic context, my article engages a (re)theorization of Blackness for decolonial politics. Building on existing works of how Black scholars, themselves, have theorized Blackness, and recognizing the fluid,…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Racial Relations, Politics
Mabingo, Alfdaniels – Research in Dance Education, 2019
What constitutes African dances as valid knowledge? Do the learning processes of African dances in local communities entail rational consciousness and epistemological interpretations of the learner? How do the processes of dance practice double as frameworks of construction of meanings? The foregoing questions provided parameters for critical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Dance Education, African Culture, Constructivism (Learning)
Livingston, Candice – Education as Change, 2018
In the light of #FeesMustFall, decolonisation has come to the fore in the South African higher education landscape. Decolonisation proposes the overthrow of entrenched European power relations in higher education and the study of fairy tales within a pre-service teaching degree in a university English curriculum provides an ideal opportunity for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Afrocentrism, Higher Education, Fairy Tales
"You Can't See for Lookin": How Southern Womanism Informs Perspectives of Work and Curriculum Theory
Morton, Berlisha – Gender and Education, 2016
Southern womanism is the theory that evokes a self-reflexive process to challenge scholars, teachers, and activists to reconceptualise the agency of "workers." Southern womanism claims that theoretical knowledge resides within the histories of southern Black women workers which developed as they transitioned from enslavement to domestic…
Descriptors: Regional Characteristics, Feminism, Whites, Racial Identification