Few twentieth century African American educators were as influential in their lifetime and as neglected by scholars in our day as Nannie Helen Burroughs. The founder of the National Training School for Women and Girls, she was admired by African American leaders ranging from Mary Church Terrell, Anna Julia Cooper, Carter G. Woodson, Ella Baker and Martin Luther King, Jr. Relying on Burroughs’ papers and other archival sources, this dissertation examines Burroughs’ educational thought and its relationship to her leadership of the Women’s Convention of the National Baptist Church, the International Council of Women of the Darker Races, the National Association of Wage Earners and other Black organizations. This dissertation argues that Burrou...
The first African-American woman hired as a public school teacher in New Bedford, Massachusetts, Eli...
The first chapter of this dissertation is an introduction to the topics of community service-learnin...
Anna Julia Haywood Cooper (1859-1964) was one of the most influential African-American educators oft...
Few twentieth century African American educators were as influential in their lifetime and as neglec...
Although frequently praised for her rhetorical abilities and widely recognized as an influential lea...
207 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1998.This dissertation examines th...
Although frequently praised for her rhetorical abilities and widely recognized as an influential lea...
The contributions and holistic educational philosophies of Anna Cooper and Nannie Burroughs are exam...
History denotes a small number of African-Americans have held leadership roles in educational public...
The transformative leadership of African American women has only rarely been acknowledged or put int...
This paper profiles the lives of four Black female adult educators whose leadership, power, and acti...
The goal in this work is to provide a brief overview of the development of Black women‟s education t...
In the late 1800s, the groundbreaking yet segregated public kindergartens of St. Louis, Missouri, in...
My study presented in this article focuses on a part of Mary McLeod Bethune's educational philosophy...
The problem is that little is known about the life experiences and womanist characteristics of Afric...
The first African-American woman hired as a public school teacher in New Bedford, Massachusetts, Eli...
The first chapter of this dissertation is an introduction to the topics of community service-learnin...
Anna Julia Haywood Cooper (1859-1964) was one of the most influential African-American educators oft...
Few twentieth century African American educators were as influential in their lifetime and as neglec...
Although frequently praised for her rhetorical abilities and widely recognized as an influential lea...
207 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1998.This dissertation examines th...
Although frequently praised for her rhetorical abilities and widely recognized as an influential lea...
The contributions and holistic educational philosophies of Anna Cooper and Nannie Burroughs are exam...
History denotes a small number of African-Americans have held leadership roles in educational public...
The transformative leadership of African American women has only rarely been acknowledged or put int...
This paper profiles the lives of four Black female adult educators whose leadership, power, and acti...
The goal in this work is to provide a brief overview of the development of Black women‟s education t...
In the late 1800s, the groundbreaking yet segregated public kindergartens of St. Louis, Missouri, in...
My study presented in this article focuses on a part of Mary McLeod Bethune's educational philosophy...
The problem is that little is known about the life experiences and womanist characteristics of Afric...
The first African-American woman hired as a public school teacher in New Bedford, Massachusetts, Eli...
The first chapter of this dissertation is an introduction to the topics of community service-learnin...
Anna Julia Haywood Cooper (1859-1964) was one of the most influential African-American educators oft...