This is the first in what the Associate Editors hope will become a series of transatlantic exchanges about American Studies pedagogy. Conducted in the four months between January and April 2017, the discussion encompasses the political significance of African American Studies, the role of identity in the shaping of curricula and student responses to those curricula, and the challenges encountered by teachers at a variety of career stages and in a range of educational and geographic locations
What my research revealed was that African American students who do not identify with the academic c...
Black women scholars rarely get the opportunity to chronicle and critique their experiences as instr...
textAfrican American history and how it is taught in classroom spaces have been a point of contentio...
How does race and gender connect to the issue of authority in the university classroom? In this se...
It has been concluded that until recently debates on what is understood as African Studies have invo...
The purpose of this unique critical ethnographic case study is to examine how the development of Afr...
Africana Studies Faculty from Central Missouri State University will discuss how they developed an i...
Using theoretical applications, the authors present an overview of theories that highlight approache...
Using sociocultural theoretical approach, intersectionality of race, Critical Race Theory, and Bakht...
Educating the world about people and events of the world is vital to getting people to understand an...
Because my area of scholarly focus—African American literature—explores issues that some students (p...
This document is the product of an online collaborative discussion inspired by Black History Month t...
Edited by Seth N. Asumah & John K. Marah (College at Brockport faculty member). Includes two chapter...
The study of Africa and its peoples in the United States has a complex history. It has involved the ...
This issue includes a message from Eastern Washington University\u27s Black Education Program Direct...
What my research revealed was that African American students who do not identify with the academic c...
Black women scholars rarely get the opportunity to chronicle and critique their experiences as instr...
textAfrican American history and how it is taught in classroom spaces have been a point of contentio...
How does race and gender connect to the issue of authority in the university classroom? In this se...
It has been concluded that until recently debates on what is understood as African Studies have invo...
The purpose of this unique critical ethnographic case study is to examine how the development of Afr...
Africana Studies Faculty from Central Missouri State University will discuss how they developed an i...
Using theoretical applications, the authors present an overview of theories that highlight approache...
Using sociocultural theoretical approach, intersectionality of race, Critical Race Theory, and Bakht...
Educating the world about people and events of the world is vital to getting people to understand an...
Because my area of scholarly focus—African American literature—explores issues that some students (p...
This document is the product of an online collaborative discussion inspired by Black History Month t...
Edited by Seth N. Asumah & John K. Marah (College at Brockport faculty member). Includes two chapter...
The study of Africa and its peoples in the United States has a complex history. It has involved the ...
This issue includes a message from Eastern Washington University\u27s Black Education Program Direct...
What my research revealed was that African American students who do not identify with the academic c...
Black women scholars rarely get the opportunity to chronicle and critique their experiences as instr...
textAfrican American history and how it is taught in classroom spaces have been a point of contentio...