A Critical Black Pedagogy Reader: The Brothers Speak

Author:   Abul Pitre ,  Abul Pitre
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN:  

9781475848205


Pages:   110
Publication Date:   15 October 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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A Critical Black Pedagogy Reader: The Brothers Speak


Overview

A Critical Black Pedagogy Reader: The Brothers Speak entails essays and speeches from leading Black men who offered critiques of Black education. This volume demonstrates that Black men have clapped back at the educational structures that have attempted to domesticate Black peoples. The book introduces Critical Black Pedagogy as an approach to addressing issues of equity, diversity, and social justice in education.

Full Product Details

Author:   Abul Pitre ,  Abul Pitre
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.90cm , Length: 22.00cm
Weight:   0.177kg
ISBN:  

9781475848205


ISBN 10:   147584820
Pages:   110
Publication Date:   15 October 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Series Foreword Abul Pitre Foreword Mwalimu Shujaa Introduction Abul Pitre Chapter 1- What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July? Frederick Douglass Chapter 2- The Awakening of the Negro Booker T. Washington Chapter 3- The Education of Black Folk W. E. B. DuBois Chapter 4- Educate Yourself Marcus Garvey Chapter 5- The Seat of the Trouble Carter G. Woodson Chapter 6- The Purpose of Education Martin Luther King Jr. Chapter 7- A Talk to Teachers James Baldwin Chapter 8- History Is a Weapon Malcolm X Chapter 9- Get Knowledge to Benefit Self Elijah Muhammad About the Editor About the Writers Index

Reviews

A Critical Black Pedagogy Reader: The Brothers Speak, demonstrates the genealogy of critical pedagogy in the history of African Americans from the earliest days. This volume introduces us to the sources of the work of many men and women writing today about the need for a new pedagogy. This is a volume necessary for the current discourse on teaching in urban America. -- Molefi Kete Asante, author of Revolutionary Pedagogy: Primer for Teachers of Black Children Pitre has assembled principal essays, which provide, context, clarity, and critical impact related to the Africana experience. Voiced in the context of African American males, this book initiates space to engage, the continuity of disparity exhibited towards African Americans. Overall, this book is a major contribution to the: social sciences, humanities, and professions. -- Kelisha B. Graves, Instructor, Fayetteville State University The selection of critical Black pedagogues and their works within this book gives educational leaders a great foundation for understanding the framework of critical Black pedagogy. The selections challenge readers to view these Black leaders in a light that focuses on liberation, equity, and justice for students, particularly those of color. -- Latrecia Allen, Assistant Principal, Owen Elementary Critical Black Pedagogy is premised upon the notion that since Africans arrived on the shores of America, men (and women) have elucidated the purpose of education for African Americans, long before the formal construct of Critical Pedagogy was thrust to the forefront of discourse in the 1930s. The point is not to dismiss the outstanding scholarship of critical pedagogues. Rather, the intent is to highlight the fact that the unique experiences of African Americans living in a White Supremacist society require an education that must confront and expose embedded power inequities, historical dehumanization, and distorted knowledge that keeps them economically, intellectually, and socially enslaved approximately 154 years after emancipation. Black students top nearly every negative educational indices. A strong argument can be advanced that by any measure, public education has failed those students. The recognition that such a reader as this is necessary two decades into the 21st Century speaks to the urgency that is needed to properly educate African American students. This book is a must read for anyone truly concerned with transforming the lives of not just Black students but marginalized students everywhere. -- Jasmine Williams, Assistant Professor, Fayetteville State University


A Critical Black Pedagogy Reader: The Brothers Speak, demonstrates the genealogy of critical pedagogy in the history of African Americans from the earliest days. This volume introduces us to the sources of the work of many men and women writing today about the need for a new pedagogy. This is a volume necessary for the current discourse on teaching in urban America. -- Molefi Kete Asante, author of Revolutionary Pedagogy: Primer for Teachers of Black Children Pitre has assembled principal essays, which provide, context, clarity, and critical impact related to the Africana experience. Voiced in the context of African American males, this book initiates space to engage, the continuity of disparity exhibited towards African Americans. Overall, this book is a major contribution to the: social sciences, humanities, and professions. -- Kelisha B. Graves, Instructor, Fayetteville State University The selection of critical Black pedagogues and their works within this book gives educational leaders a great foundation for understanding the framework of critical Black pedagogy. The selections challenge readers to view these Black leaders in a light that focuses on liberation, equity, and justice for students, particularly those of color. -- Latrecia Allen, Assistant Principal, Owen Elementary Critical Black Pedagogy is premised upon the notion that since Africans arrived on the shores of America, men (and women) have elucidated the purpose of education for African Americans, long before the formal construct of Critical Pedagogy was thrust to the forefront of discourse in the 1930s. The point is not to dismiss the outstanding scholarship of critical pedagogues. Rather, the intent is to highlight the fact that the unique experiences of African Americans living in a White Supremacist society require an education that must confront and expose embedded power inequities, historical dehumanization, and distorted knowledge that keeps them economically, intellectually, and socially enslaved approximately 154 years after emancipation. Black students top nearly every negative educational indices. A strong argument can be advanced that by any measure, public education has failed those students. The recognition that such a reader as this is necessary two decades into the 21st Century speaks to the urgency that is needed to properly educate African American students. This book is a must read for anyone truly concerned with transforming the lives of not just Black students but marginalized students everywhere. -- Jasmine Williams, Assistant Professor, Fayetteville State University


Author Information

Abul Pitre is a Professor in the Department of Educational Leadership at Fayetteville State University. He was appointed Edinboro University’s first named professor for his outstanding work in African-American education and held the distinguished title of the Carter G. Woodson Professor of Education.

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