Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Weis, Tracey M.
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ742096
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
_version_ 1867181876183040000
author Weis, Tracey M.
author_facet Weis, Tracey M.
Weis, Tracey M.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Writing Autobiographies on "Brown" in the History Classroom Weis, Tracey M. Educational History Writing Assignments Autobiographies African American History African American Students Equal Education School Desegregation White Students Personal Narratives College Students Self Concept This article examines the two autobiographical accounts of the students in Duke University about their perception on how the race especially the "Brown" decision affects their educational history. The students were advised to consult local newspapers and public records, interviews relatives, neighbors, teachers, and public officials in order to address this query. They were to draw upon course reading and library research resources to illuminate their personal experience of race and education, from elementary grades to present-day-college years. Most of the students at this predominantly White northern university find it very challenging to connect their educational experience to "Brown," a decision that seems so distant in both time and space from their daily lives. However, because of the racial homogeneity that prevailed in most rural communities, many White students claimed that they had optimistic narratives of color-bind tolerance. By contrast, when reading the autobiographies of African-American students against these optimistic accounts, a very different picture of desegregation in northern schools emerges. The quest for an equal education, a conspicuous theme in the autobiographies of the Black students, seemed irrelevant in the stories told by most of the Whites. However, reaching across the color line, Black and White students sought to reconcile their own experiences in varied northern schools with the historical and contemporary inequities in education. (Contains 6 resources.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ742096
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2004
record_format eric
spellingShingle Writing Autobiographies on "Brown" in the History Classroom
Weis, Tracey M.
Educational History
Writing Assignments
Autobiographies
African American History
African American Students
Equal Education
School Desegregation
White Students
Personal Narratives
College Students
Self Concept
Writing Autobiographies on "Brown" in the History Classroom Weis, Tracey M. Educational History Writing Assignments Autobiographies African American History African American Students Equal Education School Desegregation White Students Personal Narratives College Students Self Concept This article examines the two autobiographical accounts of the students in Duke University about their perception on how the race especially the "Brown" decision affects their educational history. The students were advised to consult local newspapers and public records, interviews relatives, neighbors, teachers, and public officials in order to address this query. They were to draw upon course reading and library research resources to illuminate their personal experience of race and education, from elementary grades to present-day-college years. Most of the students at this predominantly White northern university find it very challenging to connect their educational experience to "Brown," a decision that seems so distant in both time and space from their daily lives. However, because of the racial homogeneity that prevailed in most rural communities, many White students claimed that they had optimistic narratives of color-bind tolerance. By contrast, when reading the autobiographies of African-American students against these optimistic accounts, a very different picture of desegregation in northern schools emerges. The quest for an equal education, a conspicuous theme in the autobiographies of the Black students, seemed irrelevant in the stories told by most of the Whites. However, reaching across the color line, Black and White students sought to reconcile their own experiences in varied northern schools with the historical and contemporary inequities in education. (Contains 6 resources.)
title Writing Autobiographies on "Brown" in the History Classroom
topic Educational History
Writing Assignments
Autobiographies
African American History
African American Students
Equal Education
School Desegregation
White Students
Personal Narratives
College Students
Self Concept
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ742096