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Cookie R. Garrett – ProQuest LLC, 2023
For too long, the debate about Ebonics has been about the validity of the language and not about how the perception of the language impacts those that speak it. Ebonics has been considered inappropriate and inadequate as a language in institutions of higher education since the moment Black people in the United States were allowed access. However,…
Descriptors: College Students, Black Dialects, Language Usage, Blacks
McMurtry, Teaira – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2023
Historically, language instruction involving Black Language (BL) assumes a goal of eradication, particularly in school-sanctioned literacy practices. Language arts education for Black students must be liberatory, that is, antiracist and artful. The opportunities for English Language Arts (ELA) teachers to create, augment, and change the course of…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Grade 11, Code Switching (Language), Black Dialects
Hudley, Anne H. Charity; Mallinson, Christine; Bucholtz, Mary – Teachers College Press, 2022
"Talking College" shows that language is fundamental to Black and African American culture and that linguistic justice is crucial to advancing racial justice, both on college campuses and throughout society. Writing from a linguistics-informed, Black-centered educational framework, the authors draw extensively on Black college students'…
Descriptors: Blacks, African American Students, Black Dialects, Language Usage
Frieson, Brittany L.; Presiado, Vivian E. – Reading Teacher, 2022
Negative societal beliefs and language ideologies about Black Language speakers continue to shape how Black Language is perceived from deficit perspectives in schools. However, educators must challenge these negative ideologies by amplifying the rich linguistic features that Black Language speakers already have by positioning these language…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, African Americans, Blacks, African American Students
Stell, Gerald – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2022
This study sheds light on the socio-economic factors determining the (re)location of sociolinguistic prestige in postcolonial environments. It uses the case of Namibia, an ethnolinguistically diverse African country that replaced Afrikaans -- an established lingua franca -- with English as its official language to weaken the hold of the formerly…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Official Languages, Language Attitudes, Socioeconomic Influences
Omogun, Lakeya; Skerrett, Allison – Journal of Literacy Research, 2021
This article undertakes a textual analysis of an autobiographically informed novel, "American Street," to analyze the process of identity formation of a Black Haitian immigrant youth in the United States. Black immigrant youth remain an understudied demographic in literacy research compared with their Latinx and Asian immigrant…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Immigrants, Language Role, Literacy
Baker-Bell, April – Theory Into Practice, 2020
In this article, the author historicizes the argument about Black Language in the classroom to contextualize the contemporary linguistic inequities that Black students experience in English Language Arts (ELA) classroom. Next, the author describes "anti-black linguistic racism" and interrogates the notion of academic language. Following…
Descriptors: English, Language Arts, English Teachers, Academic Language
Foster, Michèle; Halliday, Leah; Baize, Jonathan; Chisholm, James – Multicultural Perspectives, 2020
Michèle was hurrying to class. How, she thought, could she offer the students in her African American English in Society and Schools class a method of understanding, comparing, and abstracting the studies they had been reading in class? The heuristic described in this study evolved from a desire to capture aspects of several seminal studies that…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Heuristics, African American Students, Social Justice
McCabe, Allyssa; Tamis-LeMonda, Catherine S.; Bornstein, Marc H.; Brockmeyer Cates, Carolyn; Golinkoff, Roberta; Wishard Guerra, Alison; Hirsh-Pasek, Kathy; Hoff, Erika; Kuchirko, Yana; Melzi, Gigliana; Mendelsohn, Alan; Páez, Mariela; Song, Lulu – Society for Research in Child Development, 2013
Multilingualism is an international fact of life and increasing in the United States. Multilingual families are exceedingly diverse, and policies relevant to them should take this into account. The quantity and quality of a child's exposure to responsive conversation spoken by fluent adults predicts both monolingual and multilingual language and…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Misconceptions, Second Language Learning, Literacy

Johnson, Lemuel A. – Journal of Black Studies, 1979
The ways in which Black consciousness and experience emerge in the works of three Black poets are explored in this article. Historical, cultural, psychological, and linguistic influences are considered. (GC)
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black Dialects, Black Literature, Blacks

Jackson, Blyden – Change, 1976
J. L. Dillard's contention that Black English is a language unto itself spoken by 80 percent of American blacks is argued by a black professor of English who notes the correlation between an individual's destiny in competitive American society and that individual's destiny in competitive American society and that individual's powers of…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Blacks, Cultural Context, English

Smitherman, Geneva; McGinnis, James – Black Books Bulletin, 1977
Suggests that since black speech is adequate for linguistic, social, and intellectual functions, black scholars should argue for its legitimacy and usage in the home, on the job, in school, in the media, and in all institutional contexts. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Influences, Black Power, Blacks

Fine, Marlene G.; And Others – Journal of Communication, 1979
A syntactic analysis of the language spoken by Black characters in three Black situation comedies on television; "Sanford and Son,""The Jeffersons," and "Good Times." (PD)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Blacks, Dialect Studies, Language Usage
Molesworth, Kevin – 1997
This paper states that the language called "Ebonics" is believed to be over 300 years old and that a great deal of the language was created while Black slaves were being brought from Africa to the Americas. Noting that in January of this year the Linguistic Society of America recognized Ebonics as an official language with just as much…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Blacks, Cultural Context, Elementary Secondary Education
Taylor, Hanni – Writing Instructor, 1991
Describes the writing problems of a poor, black, urban student who wants to succeed in college but doesn't know how. Asserts that language use, particularly the use of Black English, plays a major role in their lack of academic success. Offers drills and strategies to help with this problem. (PRA)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Blacks, English Instruction, Higher Education
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