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Wendy Rago Victoria Vaccari Jimmy Aycart Damien Mulinga Mbikyo

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1 Wendy Rago Victoria Vaccari Jimmy Aycart Damien Mulinga Mbikyo
Education for a shared humanity: Exploring diverse approaches to culturally responsive curricula and pedagogy Wendy Rago Victoria Vaccari Jimmy Aycart Damien Mulinga Mbikyo

2 Afrocentric Approaches for Culturally-Responsive Education in the U.S.
Wendy C. Rago M.S. International and Intercultural Education Florida International University Pembroke Pines Charter High School; Pembroke Pines, FL

3 Research Question How can Afrocentric approaches to schooling promote cultural responsiveness in diverse educational environments? What constitutes Afro-centric theory and approaches for education? How are Afro-centric approaches conceptualized and used to shape curricula development in primary and secondary schools?

4

5 Culturally responsive pedagogy
Theoretical framework for culturally responsive pedagogy in public education is based on 3 realities (Greenwood, 2011) Institutional needs to address increase diverse student populations Children of color face severe achievement gaps compared to White students Current curriculum and instruction is predominantly Eurocentric “Culturally responsive pedagogy is a student-centered approach to teaching in which the students' unique cultural strengths are identified and nurtured to promote student achievement and a sense of well-being about the student's cultural place in the world. (Lynch, 2011). What is “culturally responsive pedagogy”? The Challenge in Education 2010 report, the pop. of min. student pops has increase from 22% - 45%. Shift required for teachers to re-think their teaching practices in order to address the needs of new diverse learners.

6 Holzman, M. (2010). Yes We Can: The Schott 50 State Report on Public Education and Black Males. Schott Foundation for Public Education. Cambridge, MA. Retrieved from

7 Molefi K. Asante’s Framework for Afrocentrism:
Educational project to increase agency within the African American community Interdisciplinary; African at center of subject of study African phenomena, events, and persons with a particular cultural voice, which is absent of hierarchy and hegemony (Asante, 2000). African- American dislocation of identity has been minimized by educational, social, political, and religious institutions, and schools have reinforced dislocation by teaching African-American students to master the information and knowledge of the dominant, White culture. fundamental break in African-American children’s identities, a “cultural handicap”, due to “dislocation” of cultural knowledge “ravaged by racism, discrimination, harassment, and the Great Enslavement” (Asante, 1992, p.29). Bullet 3- Encapsulates a humanist approach, as Asante states the “possibility of diverse populations living on the same earth, without giving up their fundamental traditions, except where those traditions invade other people’s space” (p. 201).

8 Afrocentric curriculum approaches
Ideas of Afrocentric curricula are widely varied in their conceptualizations and implementations

9 Case Studies African-American Baseline essays (Portland, OR; 1987)
Africentric Alternative School (Toronto, Canada) Use of Nguzo Saba Principles of Unity, Self-determination, Cooperative Economics, Purpose, Creativity, Faith Betty Shabazz International Charter School (Chicago, IL)

10 Internal Education Debates around Afrocentric Curriculum
Advocates Critics Marable (2000) – interdisciplinary; integrative Karenga (2000)- self-discovery approach, mutually challenging, and productive dialogue; utilization of ethics; relevant to real life African American experiences. Mullings (2000) - ever changing, challenging a static, historical African cultural context Baker (2000)- vehicle for many African Americans to nurture their collective identity; allows for African Americans to personally invest in the betterment of the larger population Kilson (2000)- sees Afrocentric studies as an emotive appeal for “ethnic-group-solidarity-affirming character” (p. 175); cannot be translated to an institution forging systemic outcomes. Ravitch (1991)- Afrocentric curriculum is a “rejection of multiculturalism” and should be described as ethnocentric, racial fundamentalism (p. 272, italics original). Ransby (2000) - creates a “distorted and one-dimensional view of our history” (p. 237), refers strongly to gender bias within both Afro- and Eurocentric theories.

11 Conclusion How can Afrocentric approaches to schooling promote cultural responsiveness in diverse educational environments? Creating a sense of belonging for all students in order for them to succeed Call for radical reforms to educational curriculum, then pedagogies follow. REVISING WHAT KNOWLEDGE is IMPORTANT at all levels (primary, secondary, and post-secondary) “The difference is between incorporating the experiences and infusing the curriculum in an entirely new life” (Asante, 1991, italics added, p. 270)

12 Points for Reflection Curriculum that C.A.R.E.S. Consistent
Action-based for their own communities Relevant to the needs of the demographic Engaging with other disciplines Student-centered Not focused on test scores, but focused on the development of humans. This can naturally enhance students’ sense of belonging and roots in their community and build skills needed for the 21st century.

13 References: Asante, M. K. (1991). The Afrocentric idea in education. Journal of Negro Education, pp Asante, M. K. (1992). Afrocentric Curriculum. Educational Leadership, 49(4), pp Asante, M. K. (2000). Afrocentricity, Race and Reason. In M. Marable (Ed.), Dispatches from the Ebony Tower: Intellectuals Confront the African-American Experience (pp ) New York: Columbia University Press. Asante, M.K. and Ravitch, D. (1991, Spring). Multiculturalism: An Exchange. The American Scholar. 60(2). pp Betty Shabazz International Charter Schools. (n.d.). About Us: African Centered Education. Retrieved from Binder, A. J. (2000). Why do some curricular challenges work while others do not? The case of three Afrocentric challenges. Sociology of Education. pp Holzman, M. (2010). Yes We Can: The Schott 50 State Report on Public Education and Black Males. Schott Foundation for Public Education. Cambridge, MA. Retrieved from Greenwood, S.J. (2011). Culturally Responsive Pedagogy: A Study of Implementation. Scholar Works: California State University East Bay. Retrieved from Lynch, M. (2011, Dec. 14). What is culturally responsive pedagogy? The Huffington Post. Retrieved from edd/culturallyresponsivepedagogy_b_ html Merryfield, M.M. (2009). Chapter 10: Moving the Center of Global Education: From Imperial Worldviews that Divide the World to Double Consciousness, Contrapuntal Pedagogy, Hybridity, and Cross- Cultural Competence. In T.Kirkwood-Tucker (Ed.), Visions in education (pp ). New York: Peter Lang.

14 Tab “CIES” for comments/feedback/questions/presentation/links
Thank you! Wendy Rago Tab “CIES” for comments/feedback/questions/presentation/links


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