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Shannon Paige Clark – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This dissertation explores everyday interactions and opportunities for teachers and families to collaborate in spite of forces that often put Black families and schools at odds in one predominantly Black elementary school. I examine interactions among Black families and teachers to consider how organizational norms, values, and routines influence…
Descriptors: African American Family, African American Teachers, Family School Relationship, African American Institutions
Henry, JaWanna L.; Trude, Angela C. B.; Surkan, Pamela J.; Anderson Steeves, Elizabeth; Hopkins, Laura C.; Gittelsohn, Joel – Health Education & Behavior, 2018
Background: Psychosocial factors are important determinants of health behaviors and diet-related outcomes, yet relatively little work has explored their relation to food-purchasing and preparation behaviors in low-income populations. Aim: To evaluate the psychosocial factors associated with food-related behaviors. Methods: Cross-sectional data…
Descriptors: Food, Low Income Groups, Urban Areas, African American Family
Nickson, Dana – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2021
Too often, Black families' educational agency has been marginalized in discourse on racial and spatial divides in US education. Indeed, Black families have persistently employed a range of tactics to access and create the educational resources their children deserve. Drawing from scholarship on spatial imaginaries, in this article, I track how…
Descriptors: African American Family, Racial Discrimination, Access to Education, Equal Education
Claire E. Baker – Advances in Race and Ethnicity in Education, 2017
Father involvement is a salient predictor of children's development and recent studies suggest that African American fathers who are highly involved across infancy and toddlerhood have children who enter school better prepared to succeed. Little is known, however, about the specific dimensions of fathering (e.g., language stimulation) that…
Descriptors: African American Family, Fathers, Parent Participation, Young Children
Afterschool Alliance, 2021
The report "Time for a Game-Changing Summer, With Opportunity and Growth for All of America's Youth," finds that as participation in summer programs prior to the pandemic was on an upwards trajectory, there remained a significant number of children missing out. For every child in a summer learning program in 2019, another would have been…
Descriptors: Summer Programs, African American Family, African Americans, Access to Education
Michael D. Hannon – Journal of Negro Education, 2017
Black families and White families are affected by autism in different ways. Little scholarship acknowledges these differences, especially those communicated by Black fathers of students with autism. In this article, I share an evocative autoethnography which highlights how my cultural, familial, and occupational identities intersect and confound…
Descriptors: African Americans, Counselor Educators, School Counselors, Fathers
Compton-Lilly, Catherine; Delbridge, Anne – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2019
In this article, the authors use Bourdieu's conceptualization of capital and data from two longitudinal case studies to explore how financial challenges impacted learning opportunities for two children in a high-poverty urban community. Interview data collected from two African American families over a 10-year period were analyzed with attention…
Descriptors: Poverty, Literacy, Parent Attitudes, African American Family
Lewis Ellison, Tisha; Wang, Huan – Journal of Literacy Research, 2018
This article examines the digital storytelling practices between an African American mother and son. We used agency as a theoretical framework to explore how the two exercised their own power to collaborate on their digital story. As digital technologies became part of their practice, challenges and tensions arose when both participants attempted…
Descriptors: African Americans, Parents, Case Studies, Mothers
Yu, Xiaoqi; Seeberg, Vilma; Malone, Larissa – Education and Urban Society, 2017
Minority suburbanization has been a fast growing demographic shift in the United States during the first decade of the 21st century. This article examines the tapestry of the suburbanization experience of a group of high-achieving Black American students and their families as told by them. Departing from the all too common, deficit orientation…
Descriptors: African American Students, High Achievement, Student Mobility, Suburban Schools
Sprott, Katherine, Ed.; O'Connor, Johnny R., Jr., Ed.; Msengi, Clementine, Ed. – IGI Global, 2021
In order to promote effective learning, individuals must feel fully appreciated within their own unique identities (i.e., ethnicities, language differences, socioeconomic status, gender, religions). Culturally competent educators employ practices that acknowledge and build on cultural diversity and that identify students themselves as resources…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Preschool Children, Elementary School Students, Secondary School Students
Mosby, Karen E. – Religious Education, 2020
Historically, Blacks have out of necessity prioritized survival in educating their younger generations for existence in the racially hostile and divided context of the U.S. This education and religious education has occurred formally and informally in homes, schools, community organizations, and in congregations. This paper examines three aspects…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Teaching Methods, African Americans, African American Education
Puga, Lisa – Peabody Journal of Education, 2019
As increasing numbers of researchers, parents, and youth are rethinking the traditional school system as the default educational option in the United States, homeschooling is not only growing in size but also in philosophical scope and demographic diversity. African Americans particularly have been one of the steadiest-growing homeschooling…
Descriptors: Home Schooling, African Americans, Racial Bias, Educational Change
DiAquoi, Raygine C. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2018
In this article, Raygine DiAquoi examines the conversations Black families have with their sons to prepare them for racial bias and discrimination. Over the course of a year, DiAquoi conducted a qualitative exploration of the content of "the talk," as this conversation has come to be known, that 17 families have with their sons about…
Descriptors: Race, Critical Theory, Racial Bias, Sons
Williams, Nathaniel Andrew – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2017
The Black kitchen table has long served as a meeting place for Black families to discuss, debate, and critique issues related to the Black struggle. In particular, it was common for Black kitchen table conversations to talk about the nuances of navigating systems of legalized segregation and oppression, as well--and more recently--navigating the…
Descriptors: African American Family, African American Culture, African Americans, Political Issues
Hamlin, Daniel – Journal of School Choice, 2018
Providing improved educational options for low-income African American families has been one of the primary objectives of the charter school movement. However, among demographically similar families, school choosers may possess subtle advantages compared to nonchoosers, leading to biased estimates of charter school performance in nonexperimental…
Descriptors: Student Characteristics, School Choice, Charter Schools, Semi Structured Interviews