On Objects and Voices: Material Culture and Oral History in the Case of Shule Ya KujitambuaMain MenuOn Objects and VoicesFront page and 'About this Project'Brief Overview of The History of African-Centered EducationHistorical context of African Centered EducationCouncil of Independent Black InstitutionsAfrican Centered Education in OberlinShule Ya KujitambuaMaterial Culture and Oral History: Theory and ReflectionBibliographyAcknowledgements
Africa is At War Poster
1media/Screen Shot 2020-03-11 at 1.33.16 PM_thumb.png2020-03-11T17:34:49+00:00Ella Murrayaa4992cda402c9694497d0fc2b7db3de8a1dc8e9213Poster representing the pan-African value of nation building.plain2020-04-10T18:50:03+00:00“Africa is at War.” In: City of Oberlin files 31/5, XV series 13, subseries 4, box 4 called “Shule Ya Kujitambua, School for Black Re-Identification in Oberlin”, 1973. Courtesy of the Oberlin College Archives.Ella Murrayaa4992cda402c9694497d0fc2b7db3de8a1dc8e9
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1media/Screen Shot 2020-03-11 at 1.33.16 PM.png2020-03-11T17:51:19+00:00Afrocentricity and Nationalism9plain2020-04-28T16:00:07+00:00
“African Americans become Afrocentric through engagement in social interaction and individual reflection”.
The goal of Afrocentricity and pan-Afrikanism is to unite the African people by forming a unified African state. Models like IBI and African Centered Education utilize the power of education to attain this goal. The destruction of hegemonically white public schools and the rebirth of systems that do work, like IBIs, are only one of the many revolutionary aspects of pan-African nationalism. This concept, combined with the idea that all African people are part of a familial group with a special bond ignited the Shule. Author Felix Boateng emphasizes that African American students are expected “to feel that they must reject the culture of their homes in order to succeed in school” due to the cultural mismatches the child experiences in the two discrete places. He offers that the only way to combat deculturalization is by creating “an approach that would address the inequalities in the public school curriculum and remove the barriers to academic achievement for the masses of African-American children.” He suggests that one of the best ways to do that is via multicultural education, as the goal of this form of education is to help students use their cultural experiences in: learning, accepting and appreciating cultural diversity, and develop their understanding of humanity via these. cultural lenses, similar to the Shule system.