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In
the fall of 1997, Rethinking Schools published a special issue, "The
Real Ebonics Debate: Power, Language, and the Education of African-American
Children." The special issue, guest-edited by Theresa Perry and Lisa
Delpit, is now available in book form, published as a joint project
of Rethinking Schools and Beacon Press of Boston.
Click here for
more information on the 227-page book, "The Real Ebonics Debate."
The Real Ebonics Debate:
Power, Language, and the Education of African-American Children
An introduction to this special edition on Ebonics by the editors of
Rethinking Schools.
An Introduction from the
Guest Editors
Theresa Perry and Lisa Delpit, who guest-edited this issue of Rethinking
Schools, provide a brief history of the Ebonics controversy in Oakland
and explain what they hope this collection of articles will accomplish.
SECTION 1: FROM THE GUEST EDITORS
"I 'on Know Why They Be
Trippin'"
By Theresa Perry
An essay on the political furor that greeted the Oakland School
Board's resolution on Ebonics, and some of the issues that were glossed
over during the noisy national debate that followed.
Ebonics and Culturally
Responsive Instruction
By Lisa Delpit
A closer look at some of the connections between language, teaching
and cultural identity.
SECTION 2: WHAT IS EBONICS?
Black English/Ebonics: What It Be Like?
By Geneva Smitherman
Some of the history and technical specifics that define Ebonics.
If Ebonics Isn't a Language,
Then Tell Me, What Is?
By Wayne O'Neil
A linguist addresses some of the more common questions about
Ebonics and the Oakland School Board resolution, and some of the misconceptions
about the resolution spread by the mainstream media.
Holding On To A Language of Our Own
An Interview with John Rickford
The noted scholar, who has studied the relation between language
and culture for the past 25 years, answers questions about the development
of African-American language and its connections to contemporary U.S.
society.
What is Black English? What is Ebonics?
By Ernie Smith
Observations and reflections by one of the consultants to the
Oakland School District's Standard English Proficiency program.
If Black English Isn't a Language, Then Tell Me,
What Is?
By James Baldwin
The acclaimed writer speaks his mind on language, politics and
power in this article, originally published as a letter to the editor
of The New York Times in 1979.
Ebonics: Myths and Realities
By Mary Rhodes Hoover
A point-by-point rebuttal to some of the prevailing myths about
Ebonics, literacy among African-American children and education.
SECTION 3: CLASSROOM IMPLICATIONS
Embracing Ebonics and
Teaching Standard English: An Interview with Oakland Teacher Carrie
Secret
This 31-year veteran of Oakland classrooms explains the effects of
the Standard English Proficiency program, which recognizes the systematic,
rule-governed nature of "Black English" while helping students learn
Standard English, and how respect and cultural awareness can help
teachers reach their students.
Literature from Children's Roots
By Terry Meier
Why books written by African-American authors are important to
children's literacy development.
Using "Flossie and the Fox"
Some ways that teachers can use this spirited book, which features
several characters who speak in "the rich and colorful dialect of
the rural South," to increase the linguistic awareness of children.
Teaching Teachers About Black Communications
By Terry Meier
How teachers can prepare themselves to help African-American
students embrace Standard English as well as -- not instead of --
their own dialect.
Removing the Mask: Roots of Oppression Through
Omission
By Monique Brinson
An African-American teacher reflects on how to help children
embrace Standard English without letting go of their own cultural
identity, her own struggle to rebuild her self-image, and why this
matters.
SECTION 4: THE OAKLAND RESOLUTION
The Oakland Ebonics Resolution
The full text of the controversial resolution passed by the Oakland
School Board on Dec. 18, 1996, including revisions made to the original
version and a "policy statement" by the board which accompanied the
resolution.
Recommendations of the Task Force on Educating
African-American Students
The recommendations on cultural-linguistic literacy approved by
the Oakland School Board on Jan. 21, 1997.
What is the Standard English Proficiency Program?
Explanations by the Oakland school district of this important
program.
Oakland Superintendent Responds to Critics of
the Ebonics Policy
By Carolyn Getridge
A defense and explanation of the Oakland school district's actions
by the woman who was running the Oakland school district when the
Ebonics furor erupted.
Linguistic Society of America's Resolution on
Ebonics
The text of a resolution passed by the society on Jan. 3, 1997,
which concludes that the Oakland resolution was "linguistically and
pedagogically sound."
Opening Pandora's Box
An Interview with Oakland School Board member Toni Cook.
An Oakland Student Speaks Out
By Michael Lampkins
The testimony before Congress by the student member of the Oakland
School Board.
SECTION 5: PERSONAL ESSAYS
Official Language; Unofficial Reality
By Joyce Hope Scott
One woman's experiences acquiring bilingual and bicultural fluency
in a segregated Southern community.
Black English: Steppin Up? Lookin Back
By Beverly Jean Smith
Thoughts on the cultural disrespect inherent in much of the criticism
of the Ebonics resolution in Oakland, and the struggles of African
Americans to cope with such hostility.
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