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Showing 1 to 15 of 29 results Save | Export
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Williams, Del; Stover, Mark – portal: Libraries and the Academy, 2019
This feature describes the efforts of the Oviatt Library at California State University, Northridge to offer programming presenting hip-hop and spoken word poetry. These events, begun in 2016, feature genres relevant to the university's diverse and global enrollment. Though not traditional library presentations, they recognize the wide appeal of…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Music, Cultural Context, Academic Libraries
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Patton, Lori D.; Jenkins, Toby S.; Howell, Gloria L.; Keith, Anthony R., Jr. – Review of Research in Education, 2022
Black creative educational experiences (BCEEs) are participatory, performative cultural experiences created by or for students, centering Black artistic expression, aesthetics, and engagement. Using African-centered frameworks, we provide a methodological guide for examining BCEEs in education research, which includes centering Black "ways of…
Descriptors: Blacks, Creativity, Higher Education, Educational Experience
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Bila, Vonani; Abodunrin, Olufemi J. – Education as Change, 2020
Angifi Dladla's poetry and teaching doctrines are considered tools for consciousness raising, healing and popular education for decoloniality. Through "ku femba", an age-old practice that serves as a channel to cast away evil spells in a society bedevilled by violence, Dladla displays the relationship between man, ancestors and the…
Descriptors: Poetry, Educational Philosophy, Political Attitudes, Western Civilization
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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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Ajayi, Elizabeth Aanuoluwapo – International Review of Education, 2019
Adults, unlike children, have a wide variety of prior experiences and knowledge which they bring to the processes of learning they engage in at later stages of life. This difference between teaching children (pedagogy) and teaching adults was identified by Malcolm Knowles in the 1980s. He coined the term "andragogy" to describe the art…
Descriptors: Role, Folk Culture, Teaching Methods, Adult Education
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Saddam, Widad Allawi; Ya, Wan Roselezam Wan – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2015
Native American storytelling has become a very vital issue in education. It preserves Native American history for the next generation and teaches them important lessons about the Native American culture. It also conveys moral meanings, knowledge and social values of the Native American people to the universe. More importantly, Native American…
Descriptors: American Indians, Story Telling, Poetry, Oral Tradition
Yurtbasi, Metin – Online Submission, 2016
The Oghuz Turks being in existence for many a millenia in Central Asia has a rich cultural heritage conveyed from generation to generation through oral tradition. The "Book of Dede Korkut" discovered in 1815 in Dresden Royal Library by H. F. von Diez sheds light to an important part of that culture. That precious historic literary…
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, Turkish, Turkic Languages, Books
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Ware, Tessa – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2015
Starting with the writer's own experience as a reader, this article discusses poetry by Eric Roach, Derek Walcott, Linton Kwesi Johnson, John Agard, Edward Baugh, Michael Smith and Velma Pollard. It explores the sense of place felt by writer and reader, going on to analyse the poets' use of Nation Language, poetic metre and intertextuality in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Poetry, Poets, Oral Tradition
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Waghid, Yusef; Smeyers, Paul – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
Sceptics of an Africanisation of education have often lambasted its proponents for re-inventing something that has very little, if any, role to play in contemporary African society. The contributors to this issue hold a different view and, through the papers included in this issue, arguments are proffered in defence of an Africanisation of…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Foreign Countries, African Culture, Criticism
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Sheridan, Mark; MacDonald, Iona; Byrne, Charles G. – International Journal of Music Education, 2011
A recent report by UNESCO placed Scots Gaelic on a list of 2500 endangered languages highlighting the perilous state of a key cornerstone of Scottish culture. Scottish Gaelic song, poems and stories have been carried through oral transmission for many centuries reflecting the power of indigenous peoples to preserve cultural heritage from…
Descriptors: Classical Music, Singing, Oral Tradition, Research Projects
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Martin, Keavy – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
In 1921, the Greenlandic anthropologist Knud Rasmussen set out to travel twenty thousand miles by dog team across Inuit Nunaat--the Inuit homeland. During this three-year journey--the famous Fifth Thule Expedition--Rasmussen was struck by the similarities in the language and culture of Inuit communities across the entire Arctic. Considering the…
Descriptors: Anthropology, Oral Tradition, Eskimos, Disproportionate Representation
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Abdi, Ali A. – International Education, 2007
Pre-colonial traditional societies in Sub-Saharan Africa were mostly oral societies whose languages were not written. In the African context, especially, it was clear that the mostly oral traditions of these societies' languages were neither being appreciated nor promoted as media of communication, or means of education by the invading Europeans.…
Descriptors: Oral Tradition, African Culture, Foreign Countries, Foreign Policy
Zeitlin, Steve; Dargan, Amanda – Teachers & Writers, 1999
Discusses five forms of traditional oral poetry from around the world which not only provide a window into the cultures that nourish them, but inspire students to perform poetry, both their own and that from literature. Offers examples of each form, and presents writing exercises and ideas for students. (SR)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Literature Appreciation, Oral Tradition, Poetry
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Fisher, Maisha T. – Harvard Educational Review, 2003
An ethnographic study examined oral poetry venues in black communities in Oakland and Sacramento as African Diaspora participatory literacy communities. These literary centers in out-of-school contexts served as sites for the development of cultural identity and the practice of multiple literacies. (Contains 43 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Black Community, Black Culture, Ethnography, Oral Tradition
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Webster, Anthony K. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2004
Many literary critics describe Native American written poetry as inspired by oral tradition (namely storytelling). This seems a vacuous claim unless one can set out the features of the oral genre (tradition) and the written form, and establish a baseline for comparative purposes. It is not enough to claim that poetry is storytelling based on oral…
Descriptors: Poetry, Ideology, Navajo, Oral Tradition
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