What I Learned and What I Learnt: Teaching English While Honoring Language and Culture at a Predominantly Black Institution

What I Learned and What I Learnt: Teaching English While Honoring Language and Culture at a Predominantly Black Institution

What I Learned and What I Learnt: Teaching English While Honoring Language and Culture at a Predominantly Black Institution

What I Learned and What I Learnt: Teaching English While Honoring Language and Culture at a Predominantly Black Institution

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Overview

African Americans have viewed literacy as a key to upward mobility and freedom since before America’s Reconstruction Era. However, African American’s academic achievement continues to be plagued by the ever-widening achievement gap especially when their literacy skills are measured by standardized assessments that do not consider or value their culture, their experiences It is common to think that this is an issue in K-12 settings. However, research and practical experiences suggest that African American students’ achievement continues to be affected at the post-secondary level where they are likely to be taught by faculty who have limited experience with the nuances of Black English (or African American Vernacular English AAVE). This book steps into that gap by offering a resource for teaching speakers of AAVE at the post-secondary level.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781475839401
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 11/27/2018
Series: Critical Black Pedagogy in Education
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 112
File size: 784 KB

About the Author

Concetta A. Williams is an assistant professor of English at Chicago State University. Her research focuses on using literature to examine the experiences of urban youth, broadening the definition of literacy in an effort to better identify and understand perceptions of literate behavior in academic settings, and working with diverse student populations (first-year, first-generation).



Lydia Magras is an independent scholar whose research interests include Urban and Cultural Literacies, Spirituality and Literature, and Women’s Literature. She has presented her research before the National Council of Black Studies, the Association for the Study of African American History and Life, and the Conference of Religion, Literature, and the Arts.

Table of Contents

Foreword

Abul Pitre

Preface

Introduction

Chapter 1: Unpacking the History of African American Vernacular English

Chapter 2: Teacher Perceptions of Their Students Who Speak African American Vernacular English

Chapter 3: Closing the Gap: Connecting Students and Partnering AAVE and Collegiate Composition

Chapter 4: Pedagogical Techniques for Teaching AAVE Speakers

Chapter 5: What We Learned and What We Learnt

References

IndexAbout the Authors





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