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Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Education

The Sting: Fall 2006, Cedarville University Sep 2006

The Sting: Fall 2006, Cedarville University

The Sting

No abstract provided.


The Sting: Summer 2006, Cedarville University Jun 2006

The Sting: Summer 2006, Cedarville University

The Sting

No abstract provided.


The Sting: Spring 2006, Cedarville University Mar 2006

The Sting: Spring 2006, Cedarville University

The Sting

No abstract provided.


The Sting: Winter 2006, Cedarville University Jan 2006

The Sting: Winter 2006, Cedarville University

The Sting

No abstract provided.


Parent(S): The Biggest Influence In The Education Of African- American Football Student-Athletes, Jamel K. Donnor Jan 2006

Parent(S): The Biggest Influence In The Education Of African- American Football Student-Athletes, Jamel K. Donnor

School of Education Book Chapters

"African American parental involvement in education is inextricably linked with improving the political and economic standing of their children. In The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860-1935, James Anderson (1988} chronicles the efforts of ex-slaves to "establish schools for their own children" (p. 15). According to Anderson {1988), the Negroes, labors were grounded in the "belief that education could help raise freed people to an appreciation of their historic responsibility to develop a better society and that any significant reorganization of the southern political economy was indissolubly linked to their education in the principles, duties, and obligations appropriate to …