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Asante, Molefi Kete – Educational Leadership, 1991
Most teachers do not realize that an African-American or a Hispanic person has had to experience the death of his/her own culture to master white cultural information. By centering or empowering their students of color, teachers can reduce feelings of dislocation engendered by our society's predominantly "white self-esteem" curricula.…
Descriptors: African Culture, Afrocentrism, Black Studies, Blacks

Oster, Leslie – English Journal, 1993
Describes how four teachers from different subjects in a New York high school developed an interdisciplinary curriculum unit on Sub-Saharan Africa that integrated English, Studio in Art, and Global Studies for ninth graders. Shows how the unit helped students see connections between subjects. (HB)
Descriptors: African Culture, African Studies, English Curriculum, English Instruction

Stewart, Earl; Duran, Jane – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 1999
Establishes a black essentialist aesthetic for jazz rap, showing its relation to an African-derived history and other black traditions. Examines newer lines of argument in aesthetics about contemporary recordings focusing on Theodore Gracyk. Argues that jazz rap is defined by actual, not recorded, performance. (CMK)
Descriptors: Aesthetics, African Culture, Black Culture, Black History

Nekhwevha, Fhulu – International Review of Education/Internationale Zeitschrift fuer Erziehungswissenschaft/Revue Internationale de l'Education, 1999
Argues that the post-Apartheid curricula of Namibians and South Africans are primarily influenced by western educational models. Contends that the cultural capital of the African masses is lacking in the curriculum. Suggests that the much-acclaimed African cultural renaissance in education will only become a reality when educationalists embrace…
Descriptors: African Culture, Apartheid, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Context

Mangat, Jyoti; Johnston, Ingrid – English Quarterly, 2000
Explores adolescent readers' responses to the opening chapters of three African novels written by authors both within and outside the cultures described. Finds students were most satisfied with texts in which the unfamiliar culture was presented as "normal" and not obviously translated for them; students responded positively when differences…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Adolescents, African Culture, Black Culture
Short, Geoffrey – Intercultural Education, 2005
The importance of learning lessons from the Holocaust and from the mass slaughter in Rwanda was recognised in the theme underpinning Britain's Holocaust Memorial Day in 2004. This article is principally concerned with the lessons learnt from the Holocaust by a culturally diverse group of students aged 14 to 16. They all attended schools in an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Death, Attitude Change, War
Ishengoma, Johnson M. – International Review of Education, 2005
This study argues for the integration of African oral traditions and other elements of traditional learning into the modern school curriculum. It thus contributes to supporting the increased relevance of education to local communities. In particular, using the example of riddles collected from one of the main ethnic groups in Northwestern…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethnic Groups, Oral Tradition, Indigenous Knowledge
Mkabela, Queeneth – Qualitative Report, 2005
The article highlights the realities and dynamics facing researchers researching indigenous African culture. The cultural aspirations, understandings, and practices of African indigenous people should position researchers to implement and organize the research process. Suggestions are also made for implementing the "Afrocentric method," and how to…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Indigenous Populations, African Culture, Research Methodology
Abiodun, Rowland – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2001
No single traditional discipline can adequately supply answers to the many unresolved questions in African art history. Because of the aesthetic, cultural, historical, and, not infrequently, political biases, already built into the conception and development of Western art history, the discipline of art history as defined and practiced in the West…
Descriptors: Art History, Visual Arts, Aesthetics, African Culture
Marshall, Elizabeth; Staples, Jeanine; Gibson, Simone – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2009
In this article the authors provide a general overview of the controversies associated with urban street fiction, a brief introduction to the genre and an introduction to the complex representations of Black adolescent femininity within two contemporary titles, "Black and Ugly" (Styles, 2006) and "Bitch" (King, 2006). The authors provide a…
Descriptors: Adolescents, African Americans, Urban Areas, Fiction
Henfield, Malik S.; Washington, Ahmad R.; Owens, Delila – Gifted Child Today, 2010
The "Brown v. Board of Education" decision provided unrestricted access to educational opportunities for all students. Unfortunately, despite the passing of the 50th anniversary of this landmark decision, academic excellence remains a dream deferred for many Black students when compared to their peers. This disparity, more popularly known as the…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, School Counselors, Gifted, Academic Achievement
Fikes, Robert, Jr. – 1995
This bibliography was compiled to demonstrate the extent to which African Americans have written on a broad array of topics that do not have racial concerns as the major focus. Nonfiction books of more than 100 pages written by persons of African descent who were born in the United States or lived in the country for substantial periods of time are…
Descriptors: African Culture, Authors, Black Achievement, Black Culture
Ostrom, Hans – 1996
This paper asks what role "play" plays in writing and how it can help a writer, whatever dread, boredom, skill, or ethnicity he/she brings to writing. Some of the ideas in the paper come from Africa, courtesy of Robert Farris Thompson. In his "philosophy of discourse" discussed in the paper, Thompson speaks of the "big…
Descriptors: African Culture, Higher Education, Self Expression, Student Attitudes
Layng, Anthony – Council on Anthropology and Education Quarterly, 1976
Makes suggestions as to what Afro-American studies can contribute to the teaching of anthropology. The most valuable contribution anthropology has to offer Afro-American studies is the cross-cultural perspective. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: African Culture, African History, Black Culture, Black Education

Laughlin, Charles D., Jr. – Anthropological Linguistics, 1975
Describes attempts to determine the origin of the So tribe, an East African people, by means of comparing lexical data with those of other East African language groups. Comparisons are made between So and geographically related groups, possibly related tribal migrations, and various other East African languages. (CLK)
Descriptors: African Culture, African Languages, Comparative Analysis, Diachronic Linguistics