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Showing 16 to 30 of 163 results Save | Export
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Cruz Banks, Ojeya – Journal of Dance Education, 2021
Rhythmic virtuosity or moving with "percussive attack" is an ultimate performance quality for Black/African dance. The practice of musicality is a window into a dynamic system of intersubjective communal creativity. Drumming, for example, provides percussive sensorial information that directs a dancer's somatic and choreographic…
Descriptors: African Culture, Music, Dance Education, Dance
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Welbeck, Timothy N. – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2017
Hip-hop is an African folk art birthed in America. Whether one simply observes the tonal language that puffs the breath of life into the lyric prose of rap music, the poly-rhythms of the "boom-bap" rhythmic phrasings that became a fixture of New York rap music in the late 1980s, the winding syncopation from the pounding "808"…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, African Culture, African American Culture, Music
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Adeogun, Adebowale Oluranti – Music Education Research, 2021
This article argues that coloniality is an ongoing feature of university music education in Nigeria. It uses a multiple colonialisms framework in exploring Nigerian higher music education systems as historical and contemporary sites of colonialism within which Nigerian universities engage in music knowledge generation to reach this conclusion. It…
Descriptors: Music Education, Educational Change, Higher Education, Foreign Countries
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Ukuma, Shadrach Teryila – Research in Drama Education, 2020
This article presents the "Kwagh-hir" performance tradition of the Tiv people, Nigeria, as an alternative for negotiating sustainable cultural development. I argue that cultural contexts must be considered in any development project to mitigate against the prescriptive, external templates which result in a 'one-size-fits-all' approach to…
Descriptors: Performance, Sustainability, Cultural Context, Power Structure
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Heiland, Teresa; Megill, Beth – Journal of Dance Education, 2019
This article focuses on the development of a theoretical framework for jazz dance in which researchers hypothesized how motif notation concepts from Laban Movement Analysis (LMA) and Language of Dance® (LOD) could be used to help learners understand how the roots and branches of jazz dance styles are related. We began by investigating the…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Aesthetics, African Culture, Cultural Influences
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Howard, Karen – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2018
The purpose of this ethnographic study was to examine student outcomes of a curriculum designed to address the overlapping aims and practices of music education and multicultural education ideals in a fifth-grade music class. The following questions guided the research: What are the student outcomes as a result of a traditional music curriculum…
Descriptors: Music Education, Curriculum, Grade 5, Elementary School Students
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Howard, Karen – General Music Today, 2019
In order to bring music of Puerto Rico to the general music classroom, it is important to understand the sociocultural and sociohistorical context of the music. The traditional genre of plena shares cultural threads with West Africa, Spain, and indigenous (Taíno) culture. Commonly known as "El Periodico Cantado" (the singing newspaper),…
Descriptors: Singing, Music, Music Education, Puerto Ricans
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Varga, Bretton A.; Ender, Tommy – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2023
The work in this article (re)traces the nuances embedded within the aesthetics of the Wu-Tang Clan to draw attention to two theoretical, Wu-based concepts: "Shaolin" and "swarming." This article leans into fugivity and critical race theory (CRT) to demonstrate how hip-hop music can be a capacious avenue for theorizing alternate…
Descriptors: African American Culture, Popular Culture, Music, Teaching Methods
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Shantá R. Robinson – Current Issues in Education, 2024
Twenty-seven years ago, the documentary "Hoop Dreams" solidified a theory--that the world of athletics was one of the few places where adolescent Black males could find success. By the late 1990s, researchers were framing athletics as the next direction in the Civil Rights Movement. In this article, I argue that the historical framing of…
Descriptors: Males, African Americans, Adolescents, Athletics
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Doby-Copeland, Cheryl – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2019
Sarah McGee's major contribution to the profession of art therapy was her use of traditional African healing practices in her work with clients. Her immersive training as a ndeppkat (spiritual healer) and Lébou Ndepp rituals in Senegal offered a foundation for her approach to therapy. These rituals informed her work, even in secular settings,…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Art, African Culture, Foreign Countries
Allyn M. Phelps – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Throughout my career as an elementary music educator, I constantly sought ways to decenter myself as the instructor and make space for student agency and independence to flourish. However, my efforts over 10 years were rooted in Western Eurocentric thought. Where I thought I was creating a more egalitarian environment, my Whiteness shielded me…
Descriptors: Music Education, Independent Study, Play, Whites
Hasan Khalid Autman – ProQuest LLC, 2021
This purpose of this study was to determine the socio-cultural impact and parameters of Hip-Hop Based Education (HHBE) with the underlying goals of: a) detailing HHBE in relation to previously accepted education paradigms and philosophies; b) detailing the embedded nature of the language of hip-hop in the form of an amalgamation of African…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Urban Language, Music, African American Culture
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Omobowale, Ayokunle Olumuyiwa; Omobowale, Mofeyisara Oluwatoyin; Falase, Olugbenga Samuel – Global Studies of Childhood, 2019
The Yoruba of Southwestern Nigeria describes children as the heritage of the society because children occupy a special place in societal survival and continuity. Children are esteemed and appreciated. Thus, the embedded culture propagates the essentiality of children, the need for proper socialisation and internalisation to make a responsible…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Popular Culture, Ethnic Groups, Children
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Sunni Ali – Journal of Research Initiatives, 2024
Integrating critical literacy and conscious Hip-Hop in the classroom setting offers numerous benefits. It allows students to engage more effectively in conversations about contemporary topics, enhances their ability to integrate cultural perspectives, and provides a fresh perspective on the challenges they face in school and within their…
Descriptors: Critical Literacy, African American Culture, Culturally Relevant Education, Learner Engagement
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Mellizo, Jennifer M. – General Music Today, 2019
Over the past several decades, music education scholars have put forth a variety of convincing rationales for world music education. Yet the gap between theory and practice in this area persists. In theoretical ways, practicing music educators acknowledge the value of world music learning experiences, but many remain reluctant to fully embrace and…
Descriptors: Music, Music Education, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
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