Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Kumasi, Kafi
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Sprache:en
Veröffentlicht: 2012
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ989043
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
_version_ 1867181010243813376
author Kumasi, Kafi
author_facet Kumasi, Kafi
Kumasi, Kafi
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Roses in the Concrete: A Critical Race Perspective on Urban Youth and School Libraries Kumasi, Kafi School Libraries Librarians Urban Youth Youth Opportunities Cultural Relevance Library Services Library Research Library Development Change Strategies Outreach Programs Critical Theory Best Practices Didacticism Music Appreciation Race The late rapper Tupac Shakur wrote a poem called "The Rose that Grew from Concrete" that serves as a good metaphor for helping educators, including school librarians, to disrupt stereotypical metanarratives they might have about urban youth and replace them with new narratives of hope, compassion, and high expectations for all students. Tupac's poem is a good primer for discussing what school libraries and school librarians can do to better support urban youth's diverse backgrounds and literacy abilities. What lessons might educators and school librarians learn about educating urban youth based on the message embedded in Tupac's poem? Moreover, how might they reflexively look back at their own practices and policies in the school library to see how they accommodate (or do not accommodate) the experiences, backgrounds, and literacies of urban youth? Finally, what insights might Critical Race Theory (CRT) afford them in an analysis of school library programs and school librarians' practices as they relate to educating urban youth? These are questions that the author explores in this article to provide readers with the conceptual and practical tools for developing more culturally sensitive library spaces that support literacy development among urban youth.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ989043
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2012
record_format eric
spellingShingle Roses in the Concrete: A Critical Race Perspective on Urban Youth and School Libraries
Kumasi, Kafi
School Libraries
Librarians
Urban Youth
Youth Opportunities
Cultural Relevance
Library Services
Library Research
Library Development
Change Strategies
Outreach Programs
Critical Theory
Best Practices
Didacticism
Music Appreciation
Race
Roses in the Concrete: A Critical Race Perspective on Urban Youth and School Libraries Kumasi, Kafi School Libraries Librarians Urban Youth Youth Opportunities Cultural Relevance Library Services Library Research Library Development Change Strategies Outreach Programs Critical Theory Best Practices Didacticism Music Appreciation Race The late rapper Tupac Shakur wrote a poem called "The Rose that Grew from Concrete" that serves as a good metaphor for helping educators, including school librarians, to disrupt stereotypical metanarratives they might have about urban youth and replace them with new narratives of hope, compassion, and high expectations for all students. Tupac's poem is a good primer for discussing what school libraries and school librarians can do to better support urban youth's diverse backgrounds and literacy abilities. What lessons might educators and school librarians learn about educating urban youth based on the message embedded in Tupac's poem? Moreover, how might they reflexively look back at their own practices and policies in the school library to see how they accommodate (or do not accommodate) the experiences, backgrounds, and literacies of urban youth? Finally, what insights might Critical Race Theory (CRT) afford them in an analysis of school library programs and school librarians' practices as they relate to educating urban youth? These are questions that the author explores in this article to provide readers with the conceptual and practical tools for developing more culturally sensitive library spaces that support literacy development among urban youth.
title Roses in the Concrete: A Critical Race Perspective on Urban Youth and School Libraries
topic School Libraries
Librarians
Urban Youth
Youth Opportunities
Cultural Relevance
Library Services
Library Research
Library Development
Change Strategies
Outreach Programs
Critical Theory
Best Practices
Didacticism
Music Appreciation
Race
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ989043