African Centered Education
In 'The Miseducation of the Negro', Carter Woodson (2000) argues that the education provided to African-Americans ignored or undervalued African historical experiences, and overvalued European history and culture. This has caused the alienation of African-Americans, who became dissociated from themselves, by ignoring or cutting African-Americans' links with their own culture and traditions. Woodson argued that this type of education has caused African-Americans to reject their own heritage, while positioning them not at the center of European culture, but rather at its margins. Woodson predicted that such an education would result in the psychological and cultural decline of the African-American people.
For Woodson and many others, the solution to this problem could be found in the development of an educational system that responded to African-Americans. This model, built on the traditional African-American colleges, would teach both the history and culture of Africa together with that of the United States.
A variety of proposals were offered by prominent members of the black community about the nature and purposes of the educational system that would be most suited to the specific conditions of African-Americans in the United States. However, Woodson introduced a new dimension in the discussion when he described the potential detrimental effects for African identity and for African heritage of an Eurocentric educational model, and when he called for a greater African presence in the curriculum.
Advocates of African centered education argue that a new curriculum that provides a more equitable treatment of African culture (allowing greater presence to African history, recognizing African values and achievements, as well as white oppression) reduces bias, prejudice, racism, arrogance and intolerance among white students, and would improve the self-esteem, the self-respect and the humanity of black students (Woodson, 2000).
On the other hand, opponents of African centered education argue that it produces unnecessary divisiveness and tensions among racial groups, and that transforms history from being an academic discipline into a psychological therapy to raise the self-esteem of minority groups. Proponents counter that history is not neutral, and that African centered education is not anti-white, but anti-racist and anti-oppression.
This paper will examine African centered education in an effort to reveal what it is, how it works, how it can be implemented, and why it is important.
Implementing an African Centered Curriculum
The implementation of African-centered curriculum is a complicated issue due to the complex past and present of African-Americans (Richardson, 2000). In their quest for equality and freedom, African-Americans have taken a variety of positions regarding how to be successful in America. Or students, success equates to good academic performance. However, the diversity within the African-American community comes with many diverse ideologies and class intersections.
For the most part, all African-Americans attend private and public schools that include centuries of stereotypes (Richardson, 2000). Most find it difficult to escape the experience of miseducation. For as many African-Americans who enter college prepared for the challenge, a greater number enters the collegiate environment completely unprepared. In the majority of American colleges, African-American students face another four years of miseducation.
Miseducation can be defined as the "uplifting of the dominant society that inadvertently works to the demise of the oppressed people in the society (Richardson, 2000)." Therefore, one of the most basic ideas of African-centered education is that there is great value in knowing and that there is an important African orientation to knowledge. The promotion of multicultural and African-centered education should not be seen as an effort to remove the best that western education has to offer but as an expansion of its knowledge base.
The African-centered composition curriculum is considered to be a step toward reversing the basis of African-American students' literacy lag (Richardson, 2000). The written literacy acquisition of students from the African-American Vernacular English (AAVE) culture is greatly lacking, as compared to students from the dominant culture. AAVE students are still placed disproportionately in college-level remedial writing courses. In addition, research reveals that that African-Americans have one of the lowest college completion rates of ethnic minority groups.
While a variety of factors contribute to this literacy lag, the cultural gap is one that may be more easily resolved. The cultural gap has been well documented in the English composition classroom.
According to Richardson (2000): "An African-centered pedagogy is needed in composition to make students aware of the talents they already have and to maintain and build on the culture that nurtured them. In this regard, all African-American students who have lived in America for any length of time are members of the AAVE culture because of the collective...
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