Description

Book Synopsis
Educating Harlem brings together a multidisciplinary group of scholars to consider of the history of schooling in perhaps the nation’s most iconic black community. The volume traces the varied ways that Harlem residents defined and pursued educational justice for their children and community despite consistent neglect and structural oppression.

Trade Review
An outstanding collection of cutting-edge essays, Educating Harlem rewrites the narrative of twentieth-century urban education. Eschewing a single thesis or grand narrative, this groundbreaking volume shows the creativity, debate, fierce love, and impassioned determination of a community to make education a human right amid the ever-changing but always inequitable landscape of New York City. -- Martha Biondi, author of To Stand and Fight: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Postwar New York City
Read this book to understand how education has long been a source of pride and value in one of America’s most historic black communities. Read it to understand how systems of racial bias have been used to interrupt black life and threaten black lives. -- David Kirkland, executive director of the Metropolitan Center for Research on Equity and the Transformation of Schools at New York University
These impressive essays provide a multifaceted look at the educational battles in Harlem. Not only was Harlem a cultural mecca, it was a place of hope and frustration, of opportunity and racism. At its core were residents who disagreed on aims and tactics but remained committed to educational excellence and black equality. -- Joy Ann Williamson-Lott, author of Jim Crow Campus: Higher Education and the Struggle for a New Southern Social Order
Educating Harlem epitomizes the power and potential of interdisciplinary exchange and collaboration. I could not imagine a more comprehensive and impressive assembly of scholars contained in one collection. Both experienced and emerging researchers will appreciate the varied sources and disciplinary approaches contributors utilize to recover and recount one urban community's struggle to secure educational opportunity in the twentieth century. -- Hilary Moss, Amherst College
Educating Harlem is a comprehensive treatment that reveals the continued role of hope in shaping the activism of a community. The assembled scholars demonstrate Harlem’s ongoing efforts to use education as a tool for citizenship and socioeconomic mobility. -- Hilary Green, University of Alabama
Engaging. * H-Soz-Kult *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction, by Ansley T. Erickson and Ernest Morrell
Part I. Debating What and How Harlem Students Learn in the Renaissance and Beyond
1. Schooling the New Negro: Progressive Education, Black Modernity, and the Long Harlem Renaissance, by Daniel Perlstein
2.“A Serious Pedagogical Situation”: Diverging School Reform Priorities in Depression Era Harlem, by Thomas Harbison
3. Wadleigh High School: The Price of Segregation, by Kimberley Johnson
Part II. Organizing, Writing, and Teaching for Reform in the 1930s Through 1950s
4. Cinema for Social Change: The Human Relations Film Series of the Harlem Committee of the Teachers Union, 1936–1950, by Lisa Rabin and Craig Kridel
5. Bringing Harlem to the Schools: Langston Hughes’s The First Book of Negroes and Crafting a Juvenile Readership, by Jonna Perrillo
6. Harlem Schools and the New York City Teachers Union, by Clarence Taylor
Part III. Divergent Educational Visions in the Activist 1960s and 1970s
7. HARYOU: An Apprenticeship for Young Leaders, by Ansley T. Erickson
8. Intermediate School 201: Race, Space, and Modern Architecture in Harlem, by Marta Gutman
9. Black Power as Educational Renaissance: The Harlem Landscape, by Russell Rickford
10. “Harlem Sophistication”: Community-based Paraprofessional Educators in Central Harlem and East Harlem, by Nick Juravich
Part IV. Post–Civil Rights Setbacks and Structural Alternatives to Public Schooling
11. Harlem Schools in the Fiscal Crisis, by Kim Phillips-Fein and Esther Cyna
12. Pursuing “Real Power to Parents”: Babette Edwards’s Activism from Community Control to Charter Schools, by Brittney Lewer
13. Teaching Harlem: Black Teachers and the Changing Educational Landscape of Twenty-First Century Central Harlem, by Bethany L. Rogers and Terrenda C. White
Conclusion, by Ernest Morrell and Ansley T. Erickson
Contributors
Index

Educating Harlem

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A Hardback by Ansley T. Erickson, Ernest Morrell

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    View other formats and editions of Educating Harlem by Ansley T. Erickson

    Publisher: Columbia University Press
    Publication Date: 12/11/2019
    ISBN13: 9780231182201, 978-0231182201
    ISBN10: 0231182201

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Educating Harlem brings together a multidisciplinary group of scholars to consider of the history of schooling in perhaps the nation’s most iconic black community. The volume traces the varied ways that Harlem residents defined and pursued educational justice for their children and community despite consistent neglect and structural oppression.

    Trade Review
    An outstanding collection of cutting-edge essays, Educating Harlem rewrites the narrative of twentieth-century urban education. Eschewing a single thesis or grand narrative, this groundbreaking volume shows the creativity, debate, fierce love, and impassioned determination of a community to make education a human right amid the ever-changing but always inequitable landscape of New York City. -- Martha Biondi, author of To Stand and Fight: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Postwar New York City
    Read this book to understand how education has long been a source of pride and value in one of America’s most historic black communities. Read it to understand how systems of racial bias have been used to interrupt black life and threaten black lives. -- David Kirkland, executive director of the Metropolitan Center for Research on Equity and the Transformation of Schools at New York University
    These impressive essays provide a multifaceted look at the educational battles in Harlem. Not only was Harlem a cultural mecca, it was a place of hope and frustration, of opportunity and racism. At its core were residents who disagreed on aims and tactics but remained committed to educational excellence and black equality. -- Joy Ann Williamson-Lott, author of Jim Crow Campus: Higher Education and the Struggle for a New Southern Social Order
    Educating Harlem epitomizes the power and potential of interdisciplinary exchange and collaboration. I could not imagine a more comprehensive and impressive assembly of scholars contained in one collection. Both experienced and emerging researchers will appreciate the varied sources and disciplinary approaches contributors utilize to recover and recount one urban community's struggle to secure educational opportunity in the twentieth century. -- Hilary Moss, Amherst College
    Educating Harlem is a comprehensive treatment that reveals the continued role of hope in shaping the activism of a community. The assembled scholars demonstrate Harlem’s ongoing efforts to use education as a tool for citizenship and socioeconomic mobility. -- Hilary Green, University of Alabama
    Engaging. * H-Soz-Kult *

    Table of Contents
    Acknowledgments
    Abbreviations
    Introduction, by Ansley T. Erickson and Ernest Morrell
    Part I. Debating What and How Harlem Students Learn in the Renaissance and Beyond
    1. Schooling the New Negro: Progressive Education, Black Modernity, and the Long Harlem Renaissance, by Daniel Perlstein
    2.“A Serious Pedagogical Situation”: Diverging School Reform Priorities in Depression Era Harlem, by Thomas Harbison
    3. Wadleigh High School: The Price of Segregation, by Kimberley Johnson
    Part II. Organizing, Writing, and Teaching for Reform in the 1930s Through 1950s
    4. Cinema for Social Change: The Human Relations Film Series of the Harlem Committee of the Teachers Union, 1936–1950, by Lisa Rabin and Craig Kridel
    5. Bringing Harlem to the Schools: Langston Hughes’s The First Book of Negroes and Crafting a Juvenile Readership, by Jonna Perrillo
    6. Harlem Schools and the New York City Teachers Union, by Clarence Taylor
    Part III. Divergent Educational Visions in the Activist 1960s and 1970s
    7. HARYOU: An Apprenticeship for Young Leaders, by Ansley T. Erickson
    8. Intermediate School 201: Race, Space, and Modern Architecture in Harlem, by Marta Gutman
    9. Black Power as Educational Renaissance: The Harlem Landscape, by Russell Rickford
    10. “Harlem Sophistication”: Community-based Paraprofessional Educators in Central Harlem and East Harlem, by Nick Juravich
    Part IV. Post–Civil Rights Setbacks and Structural Alternatives to Public Schooling
    11. Harlem Schools in the Fiscal Crisis, by Kim Phillips-Fein and Esther Cyna
    12. Pursuing “Real Power to Parents”: Babette Edwards’s Activism from Community Control to Charter Schools, by Brittney Lewer
    13. Teaching Harlem: Black Teachers and the Changing Educational Landscape of Twenty-First Century Central Harlem, by Bethany L. Rogers and Terrenda C. White
    Conclusion, by Ernest Morrell and Ansley T. Erickson
    Contributors
    Index

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