"Simply stated, Black girls matter! Black girls’ voices, minds, and experiences matter. Thank you, Monique Lane, for elevating the brilliance, genius, and intellect of Black girls. <i>Engendering #BlackGirlJoy</i> is a beautifully crafted book that is powerful, poignant, and hopeful. For educators who are looking to see theory-to-practice driven work that is situated in culture, gender, care, and agency, this is the book!"
--Tyrone Howard
Pritzker Family Endowed Chair
Director of Center for Transformation of Schools
Director of UCLA Pritzker Center for Strengthening Children & Families
UCLA School of Education & Information Studies

We are living in historic times and negotiating multiple national crises. The confluence of the COVID-19 pandemic and unrelenting state-sanctioned murders of Black people has disproportionately impacted our women and girls at the intersections of employment, citizenship, housing, healthcare, and motherhood statuses. As many individuals rally for liberation on the frontlines, how might educational institutions intervene as sources of respite and reparation?

Historically, racialized sexism in U.S. schools has manifested uniquely for Black girl-identified adolescents (including cisgender, queer, and transgender youth). These learners face heightened exposure to malicious discourses and exclusionary disciplinary policies. Engendering #BlackGirlJoy identifies the teaching practices that equip young Black women to locate, analyze, heal from, and ultimately thrive through the suffering they face inside and outside of schools.

The book is rooted in the author’s experience as a South Los Angeles high school teacher working at her alma mater, trying to cultivate the life-affirming education that she desired as a child. Centering her students’ perspectives, Monique Lane outlines a Black feminist pedagogical framework that inspired bountiful #BlackGirlJoy in one embattled public school. This text is a heartfelt offering to educators committed to taking courageous and innovative action—in solidarity with Black girl learners—toward the betterment of their lives!

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Through an analysis of field notes, classroom video footage, student artifacts, in-depth interviews, and Black feminist curriculum, Engendering #BlackGirlJoy examines how the pedagogical structure of Black Girls United fostered within participants the skill set to circumvent prescribed notions of African-American femininity.

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Foreword by Bettina Love – Acknowledgments – Introduction – A Call for Identity Work: Black Feminist Pedagogy and Black Girl Learners – Organized Turmoil: A Struggling School with Boundless Potential – Invisibility and Hyper- Visibility: Perceptions of Black Girls in an Urban School – Unpacking the Pedagogy – Engendering #BlackGirlJoy – Silencing the Ego: Lessons for Developing a Transformative Praxis – Index.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781433158780
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Vekt
323 gr
Høyde
225 mm
Bredde
150 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Series edited by
Forfatter

Biographical note

Monique Lane is a proud mama, an award-winning classroom teacher, and an Associate Professor of Educational Leadership at Saint Mary’s College of California. Born and raised in South Los Angeles, Dr. Lane earned a Ph.D. in Urban Schooling from UCLA and served as a Provost’s Postdoctoral Researcher at Columbia University’s Teachers College. Her research advances Black feminist pedagogy and Black women’s educational parenting strategies as disruptors to school-based stressors that threaten Black girl learners’ opportunities to thrive. Equity & Excellence in Education, International Journal of Educational Reform, and The Urban Review feature notable articles by Dr. Lane.