
The Myth of Black Anti-Intellectualism
A True Psychology of African American Students
- 160 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
The Myth of Black Anti-Intellectualism
A True Psychology of African American Students
About this book
Why do students who belong to racial minority groupsāparticularly black studentsāfall short in school performance? This book provides a comprehensive and critical examination of black identity and its implications for black academic achievement and intellectualism. No other group of students has been more studied, more misunderstood, and more maligned than African American students. The racial gap between White and African American students does exist: a difference of roughly 20 percent in college graduation rates has persisted for more than the past two decades; and since 1988, the racial gap on the reading and mathematics sections of the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) has increased from 189 points to 201 points. What are the true sources of these differences? In this book, psychology professor and editor-in-chief of the Journal of Black Psychology Kevin Cokley, PhD, delves into and challenges the dominant narrative regarding black student achievement by examining the themes of black identity, the role of self-esteem, the hurdles that result in academic difficulties, and the root sources of academic motivation. He proposes a bold alternate narrative that uses black identity as the theoretical framework to examine factors in academic achievement and challenge the widely accepted notion of black anti-intellectualism. This book will be valuable to all educators, especially those at the high school through undergraduate college/university level, as well as counselors associated with academic and community institutions, social service providers, policy makers, clergy and lay staff within the faith-based community, and parents.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Dedication
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Series Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Personal Reflections of an African American Psychologist
- 1: Who Am I? The Search for Black Identity
- 2: Racial/Ethnic Identity and Academic Achievement: Is This the Right Paradigm to Explain the Achievement Gap?
- 3: Acting White and Oppositional Culture: Missing the Forest for the Trees
- 4: Victimhood, Separatism, and Anti-Intellectualism: In Defense of Black Culture
- 5: Black Students and Academic Disidentification: Why Grades Do Not Tell the Entire Story
- 6: Afrocentric Pedagogy as a Tool for Motivating African American Students
- Bibliography
- Index