Showing posts with label african american homeschooling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label african american homeschooling. Show all posts

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Lil Bits - New Multicultural Coloring Pages and eBooks

Lil Bits - African American Children - Online Activities and Books
Afro Positive Kids Activities

The Lil' Bits Gang is a collection of multicultural characters, designed as cute and positive images for children of color. Two New Lil Bits Downloads are currently on sale for less than $5. You can download the LB Fun Pack featuring computer games and an activity book, or just download the activity book. It contains coloring pages, cross words, stories, games, and poems. Its a nice print and play activity book for kids to enjoy for hours. Purchase your copy, download, print, and enjoy.
Official site: http://msoyonline.com/lilbits/

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Black Parents Regain Control of their Children's Education

Homeschooling, Charter Schools, and Beyond
Black Parents Regain Control over their Children’s Education

The secret is out. Many black parents are taking their children out of the American public school system and everyone is talking about it. Empty promises are no longer quieting poor minorities and the inner city masses. People are tired of waiting for smaller classes and bigger budgets. Black parents specifically are tired of seeing their children transform from bright eyed elementary school students into unmotivated, poorly educated, high school dropouts. Every year these kids receive an alarming amount of mental/behavioral misdiagnosis and negative criticism in their classes rather than proper encouragement and guidance. Moreover, beyond merely acknowledging these poor educational conditions, public schools have done very little to improve the state of education for black students. It is for this reason that Black Flight is on the rise. More black parents are seeking alternative solutions to the public school system in an effort to regain control over their children’s education.

Home schooling is by far one of the most popular and effective alternatives available to black parents today. It gives them the power to define their own educational methods; integrating stronger Afrocentric curriculums as well as moral and religious values into their daily lesson plans. The end result for many of these families is a revitalized interest in learning. As studies show, homeschooled children average 30 to 37 percentile points higher than their peers in public school, across all subjects on nationally standardized achievement tests.[1] In fact, according to a comprehensive study conducted by Brian Ray of the National Home Education Research Institute, white and minority homeschoolers scored at the 87% percentile in reading and minorities trailed whites in math by a mere 5 points. Moreover, 63% of the minorities in this study were black and Hispanic, which proves that it is possible to close the educational gap between minority students and their white peers.[2] Is it really any surprise then that black parents are taking their children out of public schools? Blacks are now the fastest growing demographic of homeschoolers totaling about 110,000 among a total number of 1.1 million homeschooled children in the United States, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.[3]

Homeschooling is clearly on the rise within the Black Community, but it isn’t the only path parents are choosing to take. Across the country public school officials are noticing a decrease in enrollment largely due to black students entering charter schools. In Minneapolis, the district enrollment is projected to be down 30%. And in the last five years, the Washington D.C. school district has lost 10,000 students; 25% of which are now enrolled in charter schools.[4] These schools are actually independent public schools of choice that operate outside many of the regulations that govern traditional public schools. Governed by a group or organization (ex: a group of educators, a corporation, or a university) under a contract or charter with the state, charter schools generally aim to better serve a particular population or improve the achievement performance within a preexisting school.[5] For the most part, a growing number of charter schools are successfully meeting their goals, which in turn is convincing many minority parents that school choice is the way to go. According to a 2004 report commissioned by the U.S. Department of Education, charter schools are smaller than conventional public schools and serve a disproportionate and increasing number of poor and minority students. This is in large part due to the fact that the greatest achievement gains can be seen among African American, Hispanic, or low-income students. According to a December 2004 Harvard University study, these students are more likely to be proficient in reading and math than their peers in neighboring conventional schools.[6]

Similar to home schools, charter schools foster more parental involvement, better student assessments, and a stronger sense of cultural identity among the minority populations that they serve. For those families looking for an entirely different approach to learning, these alternatives are definitely the way to go. For those parents who are more so interested in filling the gaps within public schools rather than replacing them all together, supplemental educational programs are another option. They provide additional academic services to students who are in low-performing schools and they happen to be very popular.[7] As a matter of fact, everyday children across America attend these after school and pre-college programs at which they generate a renewed sense of themselves through new arenas of support. In spite of overcrowded classrooms and out dated books, students can further develop their minds with the help of the one-on-one training and co-curriculum classes that these organizations provide. For the most part, these programs typically offer tutoring, mentoring, summer instruction, workshops, internships, artistic development, college guidance, and career counseling. We will review more of such programs in the chapters to come.

From new school choice initiatives to after school programs, alternative educational avenues are becoming more accessible and sought after within the Black Community. As these changes continue to translate into decreasing enrollment rates at public schools, a few things are becoming clear to the American public at large. For one, school choice isn’t simply a privilege for those who can afford a private school education; it is a viable option for every American citizen. Secondly, politicians and school district officials alike can no longer count on minority and low-income parents to stand behind an educational system that is failing their children. And most importantly, irregardless of how much certain people want to portray Black Flight and Charter School segration as a problem, the increasing number of these minority students excelling past their public school peers is an indication to black parents that in regaining their control, they have actually found the right solution.

[1] Homeschooling Helps Minorities, by Lee Safley, Illinois Christian Home Educators, www.iche.org/pages/articles/focus.php?ID=19&parent=3

[2] Why Black Children Benefit From Home Schooling, by Jennifer James, Suite 101 - Multicultural Homeschooling, www.suite101.com/article.cfm/african_american_homeschooling/111986/1

[3] Home Schooling Basics: Facts and Myths, by Jennifer James, Black America Web, www.blackamericaweb.com/site.aspx/family/homeschool50106

[4] Black Flight, by Michael Strong, TCS Daily, www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id=040706D#_edn1

[5] Definition of a Charter School, www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&rls=RNWE,RNWE:2005-15,RNWE:en&defl=en&q=define:charter+school&sa=X&oi=glossary_definition&ct=title

[6] All about Charter Schools, The Center for Educational Reform, www.edreform.com/index.cfm?fuseAction=document&documentID=1964

[7] Supplementary Education Programs, Black Alliance for Educational Options, www.baeo.org/programs?program_id=5&program_category_secondary_page_id=19


Additional Black-Education Related Posts
- Websites for African American Homeschoolers
- Find Black History / African Culture Books
- Mahogany Momma BookStore

About the Author:
This article is an excerpt of A Better Today Brings a Brighter Tomorrow, (abt.msoyonline.com) a resource guide for African American parents, self-published by LaShanda Henry. Visit www.lulu.com/msoy to purchase a copy of this book or email lhenry@msoyonline.com for details.

© LaShanda Henry 2005

NOTE: You are welcome to forward or “reprint” this article online as long as it remains complete and unaltered (including the “about the author” info at the end and the copyright notice), and you send a copy of your reprint to lhenry@msoyonline.com.

Monday, September 18, 2006

Afrocentric Learning Tools

Visit Afrocentric Learning Tools, a new black website that highlights products and services that aim to educate Black Students and promote the development of Multicultural educational tools. The site includes lesson plan ideas, product reviews, news and resources for Black parents, Educators of Black Students, and African American Homeschoolers. As well as entertainment and online activities for young black boys, girls, and older teens.

Afrocentric Learning Tools Brought to you by:
LaShanda Henry, founder of Multiple Shades of You Online an ecommunity that produces and promotes quality online content for people of color (http://www.msoyonline.com/)

ALT URL: http://afrocentriclearningtools.msoyonline.com

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Websites for African American HomeSchoolers

I spent the whole day compiling this list of websites for African American parents who have chosen to home school their children. These lists also include great sites for Black Parents and Children in general. Enjoy and be sure to share these links with friends.

Originally posted on: The Black Parenting Blog

lhenry (www.msoyonline.com)

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Schools consider Afrocentric curriculum

By Lolly Bowean, Tribune staff reporter. Freelance writer Brian Cox contributed to this report
Published February 15, 2006

Evanston-Skokie district's proposal targets achievement gap between blacks and whites

Hoping to better capture the attention of African-Americans and close the achievement gap between black and white students, a group of parents and educators is pushing for adoption of an African-centered curriculum in Evanston/Skokie School District 65.

The curriculum would keep state-required core subjects such as reading, language arts and math but include the history and culture of Africans and African-Americans in daily school lessons.

But while parents and educators across the district of 6,755 pupils agree that the achievement gap has to be closed, some voiced concern at a school board committee meeting this week that the proposal could further segregate the schools in a district that prides itself on diversity.

Supporters urged board members to launch a pilot program in kindergarten through 2nd grades at two elementary schools where almost half of the pupils are African-American. The program could start in the fall, though the school board has yet to vote on it.

If approved, the initiative would be rare for a suburban school district, according to experts, who say that Afrocentric courses are more common in urban schools with majority black populations.

What troubles school board member Jonathan Baum, who led Monday's committee meeting, is "how do we explain this to our children?"

Martin Luther King Jr. brought blacks and whites together, and the Afrocentric curriculum could mean that students would be separated based on race, because whites and Latinos may opt out of the classes, Baum said.

The idea behind Afrocentric curriculum is that the lessons focus on black students and, in addition to teaching them basic skills, build their self-esteem and confidence, said Cheryl Ajirotutu, an anthropology professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, who is co-author of the book "African-Centered Schooling in Theory and Practice."

There is no standardized national or state curriculum; each district or school crafts its own teaching plan. The curriculum proposed for Evanston schools hasn't been developed yet.

In District 65, where about 44 percent of pupils are African-American, educators have tried techniques to bridge the achievement gap, but scores still reflect a divide.

Former school board member Terri Shepard, who now heads the curriculum panel for the African-American Student Achievement Committee, has monitored test scores for 20 years.

While 94 percent of white pupils in District 65 met or exceeded standards for 3rd-grade reading, only 47 percent of black pupils did, according to the latest Illinois State Achievement Tests. In 3rd-grade math, 96 percent of white pupils met or exceeded standards, and 69 percent of black pupils met standards.

"We all say we support diversity," she said. "For that reason, we want all the kids sitting together. But the statistics show having all the kids in the same room has not benefited students of color. Why not give these kids a chance to thrive?"

Schools with culture-based curriculums have become popular in major cities where blacks are in the majority of the public school population, such as Pittsburgh and Milwaukee, Ajirotuto said.

Now, "other school districts are wondering how do you turn the tide of school failure."

In Evanston, supporters, including the NAACP, have researched the topic for a few months, and although they have a general idea how the curriculum would look, there are still a lot of unanswered questions. They include who would be in charge of the program, how much it would cost and what effect would it have on the racial make-up of general-education classes in the district.

When Shepard visited Woodlawn Community School, a Chicago public school, she was impressed that state test scores have climbed since 2001.

"I always believed the reason white children achieved is because everything was for and about them," she said. "There was nothing that showed a child of color at the center. With an African-centered curriculum, the kids see themselves everywhere."

But there's no proof that the concept actually works, said Harvard University's Ron Ferguson, who teaches and writes about educational issues.

"It's not something to be afraid of or terribly enthusiastic about," he said. "They are groping for a way to get black kids engaged academically. If you get some charismatic teachers on board, you may get results. But those same charismatic teachers might try another technique and it would work too."

The subject is touchy in Evanston because schools there have been integrated since the early 1950s--before Brown vs. Board of Education desegregated the nation's public schools--and district officials have been careful to try to make sure all schools are diverse.

And though the pilot program would be implemented at Oakton Elementary School, which is 49 percent black, and Kingsley, which is 41 percent black, it could be divisive if only African-Americans volunteer for the program, according to some at Monday's meeting.

Baum, of the school board, questioned whether it was a good idea to start another experimental program at Oakton, which has an immersion program for Spanish-speaking pupils.

"I'm not saying [the curriculum] would not be a good choice for Oakton School, but there has to be a design that is a choice for everyone," said Candace Hill, co-president of the school PTA.

Chante Latimore, who supports the proposal, said that when she asks her 5-year-old daughter what she learned in class that day, she gets the same answer: "Nothin'."

Except during Black History Month in February, when Cheyenne Buford's eyes open wide as she tells her mother about Martin Luther King and Maya Angelou. "Then she remembers everything she learns," Latimore said.

She believes an African-centered curriculum would have that effect all year long.

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Copyright © 2006, Chicago Tribune