African Caribbean pupils in art education / / Paul Dash.

This book deals with the issue of African Caribbean pupil invisibility in the art and design classroom. As such it addresses African Caribbean pupil invisibility in almost any teaching and learning context. The book argues that the slave trade, which ruptured their continuities with an African past,...

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Place / Publishing House:Rotterdam, The Netherlands : : Sense Publishers,, [2010]
©2010
Year of Publication:2010
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource
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(OCoLC)1096240586
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spelling Dash, Paul, author.
African Caribbean pupils in art education / Paul Dash.
Rotterdam, The Netherlands : Sense Publishers, [2010]
©2010
1 online resource
text rdacontent
unmediated rdamedia
online resource rdacarrier
This book deals with the issue of African Caribbean pupil invisibility in the art and design classroom. As such it addresses African Caribbean pupil invisibility in almost any teaching and learning context. The book argues that the slave trade, which ruptured their continuities with an African past, continues to impact on the learning of such pupils relative to others. In seeking to explicate this matter, the book places African Caribbean pupils in the wider context of African, Caribbean and Western cultural identities. Just where do they belong? To address this matter, it calls on the theorising of thinkers with an interest in identity construction, learning and belonging particularly with reference to the Caribbean. The book is organised in three sections, the first presents the rationale for the enquiry; the second outlines the outcome from a small research project with a focus on African Caribbean learners in the art and design classroom, and the third reflects on key issues that emerged from the research in relation to the rationale. The book ends by offering possibilities for developing African Caribbean teaching and learning in art and design. African Caribbean Pupils in Art Education is very erudite and the centre of a world of reference and allusion - Dash relates its arguments and insights to many different writers and contexts. These will lead readers to many other writers and their arguments in related fields of study personalised research - interviews with teachers and students, adds realism and close-to-the-bone insight to the points Dash makes. These interviews are not 'academised' and made tedious or uninteresting, but real life and real classroom and curriculum issues come out clearly and undisguisedly in the subjects’ words. Many of their points are full of meaning and lucidity and add more power to Dash’s arguments. Thus the book will be of real value to prospective teachers and teacher educators too, as a tool of learning and a stimulus for discussion. The book goes a long way beyond only being a text for Art Education students. It’s arguments have salience for all Educationalists and trainee teachers, as well as for staffrooms in Britain and North America (Canada and the U. S., for example). It deals with vital questions, both for African-Caribbean students and their white and Asian classmates, canvassing issues of intellectual and cultural confidence for African-Caribbean students and historical and contemporary truth for others. Chris Searle , Director of the Ahmed Iqbal Ullah Race Relations Resource Centre at the University of Manchester.
Preliminary Material -- The Background to the Study -- Introduction -- The Process of Gap -- Multicultural Art Teaching Content and Diaspora Children -- The Contemporary Cultural Space -- Presentation of Research Data -- Research Methodology -- The Research -- Connections with Africa Research Question 2 -- Connections with Europe -- Reflections on Key Findings in the Research -- Absence of Ruins -- African Caribbean Body-Style and the Classroom -- Popular Culture and Black Expressivity -- Conclusion -- References -- Extended Quote from Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man -- I Can do it Conference Report.
Description based on print version record.
Includes bibliographical references.
Art Study and teaching (Secondary) Great Britain.
Multicultural education Great Britain.
West Indians Education Great Britain.
94-6091-049-1
language English
format eBook
author Dash, Paul,
spellingShingle Dash, Paul,
African Caribbean pupils in art education /
Preliminary Material -- The Background to the Study -- Introduction -- The Process of Gap -- Multicultural Art Teaching Content and Diaspora Children -- The Contemporary Cultural Space -- Presentation of Research Data -- Research Methodology -- The Research -- Connections with Africa Research Question 2 -- Connections with Europe -- Reflections on Key Findings in the Research -- Absence of Ruins -- African Caribbean Body-Style and the Classroom -- Popular Culture and Black Expressivity -- Conclusion -- References -- Extended Quote from Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man -- I Can do it Conference Report.
author_facet Dash, Paul,
author_variant p d pd
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Dash, Paul,
title African Caribbean pupils in art education /
title_full African Caribbean pupils in art education / Paul Dash.
title_fullStr African Caribbean pupils in art education / Paul Dash.
title_full_unstemmed African Caribbean pupils in art education / Paul Dash.
title_auth African Caribbean pupils in art education /
title_new African Caribbean pupils in art education /
title_sort african caribbean pupils in art education /
publisher Sense Publishers,
publishDate 2010
physical 1 online resource
contents Preliminary Material -- The Background to the Study -- Introduction -- The Process of Gap -- Multicultural Art Teaching Content and Diaspora Children -- The Contemporary Cultural Space -- Presentation of Research Data -- Research Methodology -- The Research -- Connections with Africa Research Question 2 -- Connections with Europe -- Reflections on Key Findings in the Research -- Absence of Ruins -- African Caribbean Body-Style and the Classroom -- Popular Culture and Black Expressivity -- Conclusion -- References -- Extended Quote from Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man -- I Can do it Conference Report.
isbn 94-6091-050-5
94-6091-049-1
callnumber-first L - Education
callnumber-subject LC - Social Aspects of Education
callnumber-label LC1099
callnumber-sort LC 41099.5 G7 D374 42010
geographic_facet Great Britain.
illustrated Illustrated
dewey-hundreds 300 - Social sciences
dewey-tens 370 - Education
dewey-ones 370 - Education
dewey-full 370.1960941
dewey-sort 3370.1960941
dewey-raw 370.1960941
dewey-search 370.1960941
oclc_num 1096240586
work_keys_str_mv AT dashpaul africancaribbeanpupilsinarteducation
status_str n
ids_txt_mv (CKB)4970000000170499
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is_hierarchy_title African Caribbean pupils in art education /
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The book ends by offering possibilities for developing African Caribbean teaching and learning in art and design. African Caribbean Pupils in Art Education is very erudite and the centre of a world of reference and allusion - Dash relates its arguments and insights to many different writers and contexts. These will lead readers to many other writers and their arguments in related fields of study personalised research - interviews with teachers and students, adds realism and close-to-the-bone insight to the points Dash makes. These interviews are not 'academised' and made tedious or uninteresting, but real life and real classroom and curriculum issues come out clearly and undisguisedly in the subjects’ words. Many of their points are full of meaning and lucidity and add more power to Dash’s arguments. Thus the book will be of real value to prospective teachers and teacher educators too, as a tool of learning and a stimulus for discussion. The book goes a long way beyond only being a text for Art Education students. It’s arguments have salience for all Educationalists and trainee teachers, as well as for staffrooms in Britain and North America (Canada and the U. S., for example). It deals with vital questions, both for African-Caribbean students and their white and Asian classmates, canvassing issues of intellectual and cultural confidence for African-Caribbean students and historical and contemporary truth for others. 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