African-Centered Pedagogy

Developing Schools of Achievement for African American Children

Peter C Murrell Jr author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:State University of New York Press

Published:21st Feb '02

Should be back in stock very soon

African-Centered Pedagogy cover

Integrates the historical, cultural, political, and developmental considerations of the African American experience into a theory for the educational achievement of African American children.

What can teachers, administrators, families, and communities do to create schools that provide rich learning experiences for African American children? Based on a critical reinterpretation of several key educational frameworks, African-Centered Pedagogy is a practical guide to accomplished teaching. Murrell suggests integrating the historical, cultural, political, and developmental considerations of the African American experience into a unified system of instruction, bringing to light those practices that already exist and linking them to contemporary ideas and innovations that concern effective practice in African American communities. This is then applied through a case study analysis of a school seeking to incorporate the unified theory and embrace African-centered practice. Murrell argues that key educational frameworks-although currently ineffective with African American children-hold promise if reinterpreted.

"Murrell's autobiographical voice not only provides a historical and cultural space for understanding the particulars of African American teaching and learning, but also presents a personal case that is both powerful and illuminating. This book will reshape our thinking about what theory is and what it means for teaching practice." — James Earl Davis, coeditor of Black Sons to Mothers: Compliments, Critiques, and Challenges for Cultural Workers in Education

"Challenging simplistic approaches to educating African American children, Murrell suggests a well-researched model that links what we know about learning theories and cultural studies. He explains the 'triple threat' to African American student achievement—teachers who expect less, the media messages that depict African Americans as less able, and peers who say that academically successful African American children are 'acting white.' He gives personal examples and shares his experiences so that teachers know he has worked in schools and understands their world." — Khaula Murtada-Watts, Indiana University

ISBN: 9780791452929

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 290g

236 pages