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LET THA CIRCLE BE UNBROKEN

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AFTER READING THIS INTRO PLEASE VIEW THE ICE BREAKER VIDEOS,

THEN YOU'LL BE PROPERLY PREPARED TO READ THE GUIDE


You will quickly notice that RBG Street Scholars Think Tank flows seamlessly across websites and social networks. Presently, we have 20 websites / networks comprising over 5000 RLOs (Reusable Learning Objects) and media assets all concentricly integrated and linked to hundreds of robust Afrikan-centered websites. The Zine pilots enable you to access and navigate everything without ever having to leave the college. The various integrated curricula that comprise the communiversity represent learning assets which are delivered via electronic dialogue between us (self-directed co-learners and expert tutors / facilitators of Afrikan descent). We all share a common purpose, depend upon each other and are accountable to each other for the collective's and the school's academic success. We are an interactive groups in which everyone actively communicates and negotiates higher learning activities with one another within a contextual framework facilitated by online tutors / experts / elders and ancestors. The entire school is about us, by us and for us--Afrikan Peoples Development / socially, politically, economically, educationally and morally.


Dr. Akbar & Dr. Hilliard on Voices From the Village - Part 3 of 3



"A Curriculum Overview Booklet"

RBGz Student-Teacher Users Guide: A Basic Primer

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OVERALL GOALS OF THE COMMUNIVERSITY:

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1. To familiarize and expose learners to a wide variety of 19th and 20th century African-American leaders and our rich history of struggles for human and civil right,national liberation and self determination.

2.To expose learners to a Concentrically Integrated African-Centered Liberal Arts Curriculum--including, online mini-lectures, commentaries and interviews from our authors, playwrights, poets, activist and scholars--that will enable large amounts of information to be comprehended in a relatively short period of time.


3.To continue the development of an appreciation of Afrikan-Centered Education propagated through the Afrikan oral & musical traditions; including Afrikan Drums, Spoken Word / Rap, R & B, Blues, Jazz and Reggae.


4.To draw lessons from the rich legacy of struggle and resistance to oppression within the African American community through critical analysis of videos, photo-stories, multimedia essays and PowerPoint shows and scholarly charts, tables, graphs and PDF documents; thus fostering socio-political activism in the learners own lives.


5.To develop, encourage and diversify strategies for learning about and responding to social, political, cultural and moral issues impacting Afrikans in America, thus increasing comprehension and interpretation skills.


6.To synthesize serious community issues using multi-faceted content and learning objects which represent the perspective of those who are in an American minority group; and apply said principles and generalizations in investigation of societal issues and problems from an Afrikan-Centered perspective.


7.Finally and most importantly, to teach and learn from aspiring and seasoned teachers within a sophisticated SDL (Self Directed Learning)--e classes environment how to become more effective teachers, leaders and activist. We sharpen academic professionals and community educators / street scholars skills in the areas of public speaking, reading and writing critically and designing captivating presentation suitable for both whole-group and small-group settings. In other words, this is where the tutors (RBG Street Scholar) and other facilitators teach you how to become inspirer and healer of our people. Not only do we develop your skills, but we also provides you with the content to do you thang. You will even learn how to modify the content provided such that it becomes a new derivative product all you own; to do what you will, ie. teach from it, barter it etc.


Enjoy your Sankofa and let us know what you think

In keeping with the spirit of Sankofa ("return and get it" a West African Symbol of Adinkra Wisdom representing the importance of our learning from the past) you should keep in mind that in the societies of our Afrikan ancestors and current kinsman the oral tradition was / is the method of choice in which history, stories, folktales and spiritual beliefs were /are passed on from generation to generation. Webster's dictionary defines "oral" as, "spoken rather than written," and it defines the word "tradition" as, "transmittal of elements of a culture from one generation to another especially by oral communication." It is the power of the Afrikan oral tradition integrated with written documentation that lays at the core of our trailblazing teaching / learning methodology.

Your studies, analysis and evaluations should constantly ask and answer “what a given classroom / subject / topic’s content is intending to elucidate (explain) — (ie. elements and aspects of oppression or liberation); and always why and how. RBG Street Scholars Think Tank is essentially a concentricly integrated articulation of and defense for a radically progressive New Afrikan educational process. With strict attention to developing our student’s basic education skills in the context of the highest standards of academic excellence, suitable for one to confidently sit for high stake exams, we simultaneously advance the psycho-emotional healing and spiritual upliftment of our people by providing knowledge, wisdom and overstanding of the historo-cultural, socio-political and psycho-educational experiences of Africans in America in a way that radically reappraises education from the pained and angry perspective of the oppressed black community.

The content and methods of our school are meant to demonstrates how the mediums of Afrikan American music, spoken word and images have been/ are used to create incarcerated minds, bodies and spirits; and thus in turn, how they can as well be used to foster physical, mental and spiritual liberation.

Historically (particularly over the past 20 years) mainstream educators have resisted a critical analysis of urban music and culture in the form of hip-hop/rap from an Afrikan centered academic perspective, not realizing the significant positive impact this genre of music can have on the Afrikan worldview and Afrikan peoples views of the world. However, popular music and images are made by someone (corporate profiteers, with two ends in view—the propagation of white supremacy / black oppression and money). Thus, we contend that rap music/hip-hop culture can be offered in such a way that it EduTains -analyzing racism, capitalism, sexism and other manifestations of national oppression- as well as be enjoyed as entertainment. One of the communiversity's main goals is for the learner to formulate a sophisticated socio-political and historo-cultural “over-standing” of the present condition of the masses of our people and the poor-at home and abroad. Thus, you will be equipped with a cultural orientation suited for further Afrikan-centered socialization. We believe that such an academic pursuit is vitally necessary because the Eurocentric education /acculturation process, that we most frequently pursue in America for a job, more frequently than not poisons our individual and collective aspirations of national liberation and self determination as an Arikan people.

Historically poetry/ rap, literature and music have been combined to play a pivotal role in black progress and power in the Americas. It all goes back to the power and central role of the Afrikan oral tradition. For example, our ancestors communicated with drums. “Because of the perceived potential of the talking drum to "speak" in a tongue unknown to slave traders and thus to incite rebellion, revolt, resistance and revolution, in 1838 these and other drums were banned from use by African in the United States.

RBG Street Scholars Think Tank intends to serve as a premier

“New-Age Talking Drum”

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There are several main reasons for the school’s audio-visual (Radio and TV driven) primacy:

1. We believe that the ultimate end of intellectual growth and development for students of Afrikan decent in 21st America is, first and foremost, a deeper overstanding and a fuller appreciation of Afrikan peoples continuing struggle for individual and collective liberation. Reading, thinking, looking and listening with close attention to the curricula’s scholastic guidance you learn to see more, understand more and uncover more, thus preparing for a richer, more selfless and more meaningful contributions to self and kind.

2. Secondly, as music and videos use artful combinations of language and images, the essential processes of meaning-making, to formulate ideas in the minds of the participants, critical analysis can lead to a more astute and powerful use of Black music and images (espically that of the hip-hop / rap music genre ) as tools of Africentric cultural development and leadership training.

3. Thirdly, critical analysis of RBG’s audio-visual content and methods very efficiently teaches us to be aware of the cultural delineations of popular / white corporate media, including its ideological elements and psyops motivations.

4. Finally, please remember, education is not eternal and timelessly written in stone, but should be situated historically, socially, intellectually, written and read at particular times, with particular intents, under particular historical conditions, with particular cultural, personal, gender, racial, class and other perspectives at center. Through multimedia learning we can see ideology in operation. We think this new style of teaching is of particular use in an age where so many of us, sad to say, don't read, but use popular media as a sole source of information. Thus, RBGz curricula are designed to encourage and enhance critical reading, thinking and writing.

RBG4Lif

N.B. Post Script

The RBG Revolution at RBG Street Scholars Think Tank is about Healing and Revolution of the individual and collective mind, body and soul of New Afrikan people through proper education.

Healing is work, not gambling. It is the work of inspiration, not manipulation. If we the healers are to do the work of helping bring our whole people together again, we need to know such work is the work of a community. It cannot be done by an individual. It should not depend on people who do not understand the healing vocation….The work of healing is work for inspirers working long and steadily in a group that grows over generations, until there are inspirers, healers wherever our people are scattered, able to bring us together again.

In the words of Sekou Toure “to us, Revolution means the collective movement initiated by a group of men or by a whole people, and supported by their conscious determination to change an old degrading order into a new, progressive order in view of ensuring the safeguard and development of collective and individual interests, without any discrimination whatsoever. The People’s Revolution, to us, remains thus a collective consciousness in motion, and a collective movement guided by conscience and whose ultimate aim is the continued progress of man and the People.”

(From: http://www.panafricanperspective.com/ture2.htm


To Overstand How The School Works Further Please Read:

RBG Street Scholars Think Tank Rules Of Engagement- 2nd Qt. Update ...

RBGz Essential Foundational Readers: For All RBG Student-Teachers


Tags: education, liberation, rbg, revolution

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DPZ "THEY SCHOOLS"

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To Overstand How It Works Further Please Read:

RBG Street Scholars Think Tank Rules Of Engagement- 2nd Qt. Update ...

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RBG Street Scholar




http://rbgstreetscholar.imeem.com/


From : RBG Street Scholars Think Tank Multi-Media E-Zine
RBG Street Scholars Think Tank Audio Downloadables


Link, Listen, Read, Comment, Rate, Embed and/or Download
Who Taught You To Hate Yourself Minister Malcolm X (4:08) 08-07 "The Legacy of Torture" National Radio Project (29:00) High Till I Die Tupac (4:07) Message 2 Da Grassroots Mumia Abu-Jamal (5:09) The Afrikan Worldview Dr. Ani Marimba (8:09) Circle of Life Broadway Musical - Lion King (4:29) Paul Robeson RBG Street Scholar Mix Tape (1:15) Black Market Militia-The Hit DEAD PREZ (3:34) A Song For Assata Common (6:48) Assata Shakur- We Can Win Our Liberation Freedom Archives (1:10) Amari Baraka on Racism , Captialism and National Oppression Dr. Amari Baraka (35:31) Rap Resonances Abroad Mumia Abu-Jamal 10-14-05 (4:10)


I'll Be Sweeter Tomorrow The Escorts (4:49) Dis Poem Mutabaruka (2:49) Prophets of Rage Public Enemy (3:18) Still I Rise Tupac Shakur, Son of Dr. Mutulu Shakur (4:50) Drums - African Percussion Drums - African Percussion (3:42) Keep Rising to the Top Pieces of a Dream (4:54) Esther Phillips Just Say Good Bye (2:16) Malcolm X -Alex Haley Autobiogrphy 7of 8 Alex Haley (39:15) The History of Cointelpro I Ward Churchill (29:48) No Sell Out Malcolm X & Keith LeBlanc (5:36) Malcom X Comedy Touch Tone Terrorists (3:34) A Peoples History of the United States: Audio Book 2 of 6 Howard Zinn (50:44)

Ain't Got No I Got Life Nina Simone (2:07) Frederick Douglas On Struggle Frederick Douglas (1:10) Fanny Lou Hamer RBG Street Scholar (0:28) Declaration Against the War on Vietnam Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (54:55) Redbone Cassandra Wilson (5:35) Ward of the State Askari X (5:06) Save the Children Gil Scott-Heron (4:27) Oh My God Micheal Franti & Spearhead (5:17)


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RBG A-V Core Curriculum Overview



RBG Roots, Rock, Reggae, Rap and Revolution 1


RBG Roots, Rock, Reggae, Rap and Revolution 2




Genocide In Iraq / We Gotta Have Peace




Katrina and Racism: The RBG View




RBG Street Scholar On "Why I'm Angry"


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New word download. Although this doc. is online NBUF not infrequently encounters server issues. It is too vital a document to our educational program to not have unfettered access.
Decolonizing the African Mind:
Further Analysis and Strategy
by Uhuru Hotep






The central objective in decolonising the African mind is to overthrow the authority which alien traditions exercise over the African. This demands the dismantling of white supremacist beliefs, and the structures which uphold them, in every area of African life. It must be stressed, however, that decolonisation does not mean ignorance of foreign traditions; it simply means denial of their authority and withdrawal of allegiance from them. - Chinweizu See:
http://africawithin.com/chinweizu/chinweizu.htm

Also read:

An Overview of the African Centered Perspective in Education: By Uhuru Hotep

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An Overview of the African Centered Perspective in Education

Uhuru Hotep

"Utopia is an African's fuel." -Amiri Baraka

Introduction

The concepts outlined in this paper were presented in 1997 at the Norham Centre for Leadership Studies' 9th Annual Conference held at Oxford University. I am indebted to Dr. Vivian Williams, director of the Norham Centre, for his kind suggestion that I further refine my thoughts on this topic. This paper attempts to acknowledge his request by providing a framework for a discussion of the African centered perspective in education first by presenting its recent historical background, second by identifying its guiding concepts, and third by delineating its major goals and objectives.

The Historical Context

African centered education is an evolving liberatory project having a philosophy and practice informed by the 500-year history of unrelenting struggle waged by Africans in the Americas to first maintain and now recover and reconnect with the best of our African intellectual and cultural heritage. Among the 20th century pioneers in this movement, perhaps no one is more important than Carter G. Woodson (1875-1950). Dr. Woodson's major contributions include not only the establishment of Negro History Week (now Black History Month) in 1926, but also the 1933 publication of what remains the definitive critique of African American education, The Mis-Education of the Negro. Equally important are the pioneering school-building efforts of The Honorable Elijah Muhammad (1897-1975), founder of the Nation of Islam, who during the 1930s, 40s, and 50s, established dozens of independent, private African-Islamic schools for the children of his followers and supporters.1 Ascending on the sweet winds of freedom that criss-cross the African World, the youth who energized the U.S.-based Civil Rights/Black Consciousness movements of the 1960s and 70s began to realize in varying degrees that a different type of education was imperative if African Americans were to elevate their group status in American society and the world. In such ideological disparate formations as the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) at one end of the political continuum and the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense (BPPSD) and the Congress of Afrikan People (CAP) at the other, there was a growing awareness among the youth that African Americans had not only been politically and economically disenfranchised by the ruling elites, but educationally disenfranchised as well. Further politicized as much by Kwame Ture's (Stokely Carmichael) clarion call for Black Power in 1966 as by the assassinations of El-Hajj Malik Omowale El-Shabazz (Malcolm X) in 1965 and Martin Luther King Jr., in 1968, these student activist established what were known in the African American community as freedom or liberation schools, in part inspired by SNCC school-building efforts in rural Mississippi initiated earlier in the decade.

At these schools, PE (political education) classes, as the Black Panthers called them, routinely included readings in and discussion of African and African American history and culture. Three of the most successful Northern freedom schools of this period were the Freedom Library Day School, established in 1968 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania by John Churchville, Uhuru Sasa Shule, established in 1970 in Brooklyn, New York by Jitu Weusi and the African Students Association, and the Oakland, California-based, BPPSD-operated Intercommunal Youth Institute, established in 1971.2

These efforts at re-centering and politicizing African American education represented not only a growing community demand for schools offering a historically-inclusive and culturally-affirming education for African American children, but led to the establishment of the Council of Independent Black Institutions (CIBI) in 1972. As the premier association of Pan African nationalist educators, school administrators, and parents committed to developing counter hegemonic curricula and pedagogies for Africans in America and around the world, the creation of CIBI institutionalized this shift in educational vision from cultural assimilation to cultural nationalism.3

During the 1970s and 1980s, CIBI-affiliated African centered shules (schools) sprung up in nearly every major American city with a significant African American population. Washington, DC and Pasadena, California are the homes of two of the better-known CIBI institutions, NationHouse Watoto and Omowale Ujamaa, respectively. Many of these enterprises, like the two just mentioned, have grown into full-time operations.4

The 1990s have witnessed the internationalization of African centered educational theory and its embrace by increasing numbers of African educators and parents both in the U.S. and abroad. Advocates are impressed with the high self-esteem, wholesome social values, and abundant academic skills of African centered students, and depressed by the public schools' half-hearted efforts, lack-luster commitment, in short, dismal failure at unlocking and then developing the genius potential of African American learners.

Guiding Principles

There are five key concepts essential to the African centered perspective in education. First, African centered education is immersed in sankofa. Sankofa is an Akan principle which in African centered education means to reach back, bring forward, and reconnect African students and their communities with the best of those life-enriching philosophical principles and community-building cultural practices that sustained for thousands of years what Agyei Akoto calls the "classical African civilizations" of Kemet (Egypt), Nubia, Axum and Meroe 5, as well as the Yoruba, Asante, Zulu, Gikuyu, Dogon and other traditional societies in Africa and around the world.

One life-giving principle resurrected from the ancient Nile Valley cultures embraced by African centered educators is ma'at, which means not only justice, but also truth, righteousness, order, harmony, reciprocity and balance. According to Maulana Karenga, ma'at was the "heart of Kemetic ethics and spiritual striving;" today it is the "soul" of African centered pedagogical theory and practice.6 As an emancipatory and humanistic enterprise whose terminal objective is the empowerment of African people who will restore ma'at to human affairs, African centered education seeks no hegemony over others, but only a "pluralism without hierarchy" where the African centered idea would take its rightful place, "one perspective beside many."7 Next, African centered perspectives in education aspires to provide African students and their communities with the cognitive and affective tools required to reconstruct the African World and end the maafa. Maafa is a Swahili word meaning "disaster," and is usually associated with the African Holocaust, or the past five centuries of European and Arab orchestrated destruction of traditional African societies and subsequent devastation of indigenous African people first through enslavement and colonialism, then segregation and apartheid, and now miseducation and genocide. The reign of terror - resulting in the deaths of tens of millions - unleashed by Europe alone against African people is without precedence in the annals of human history.8 Among the warriors in the struggle to end the maafa and restore ma'at, African centered education is the weapon of choice.

Operating on the premise that all true education begins with and is centered in self-knowledge, and therefore is autocentric, African centered education relocates African students and their communities to the center of the educational process for elevation and then placement back on to what Marimba Ani calls "our ancestral power base."9 Education is meant to be empowering, and to be so it must be rooted in the history, traditions, and culture of the people it is intended to serve. As a refocusing and relocative vehicle, African centered education re-positions African students and their communities not to the margins of the educational enterprise as does the prevailing eurocentric view, but to the very heart of the teaching and the learning.

Lastly, African centered education in the American context is unabashedly nationalistic, and thus committed to the intergenerational transmission of nationalist theory and practice. Though it rejects the assimilationist outcomes inherent in mainstream American education, it is not isolationist or exclusionary. It is Pan African and global. In a pluralistic, capitalistic society like the United States, each nationality must organize its members to advance their group interest or risk being the victims of those who do. At the same time each nationality must cooperate with others for the good of the larger whole.

Goals African centered education has as a major goal providing African students and their communities with African-based educational philosophies, curricula and pedagogies designed to:

• Elevate self-esteem • Broaden cultural references • Deepen spirituality
• Shape social values
• Heighten political awareness
• Accelerate skills development
• Improve life chances

These seven educational goals, I believe, would, as Safisha Madhubuti teaches, "contribute to achieving pride, equity, power, wealth and cultural continuity for Africans in America and elsewhere."10 On a sociopolitical level, African centered education recognizes that 21st century Africans struggling to end the maafa and to restore ma'at will require what Kwame Nkrumah called "liberated zones" honey-combed with sets of interlocking institutions where they can grow, develop and create in a wholesome, loving and nurturing environment. Mwalimu Shujaa teaches that our shules are the seedbed of Nkrumah's "liberated zones."11 Least we loose njia (the way), Molefi Asante, the grand architect of African centered theory, reminds us that, "We do not seek education to reign over others or to amass great wealth; we seek education to become better people which means to work for harmony and peace in the world."12 But, implicit in the restoration of ma'at, the end goal of African centered education, is the termination of the maafa. The one cannot be achieved without the other, and neither can be realized without first recognizing that the thoroughly utopian but absolutely essential task of establishing a New World Order is the goal.

In preparation for world leadership and service, for five centuries the sons and daughters of the most ancient societies on earth - the sons and daughters of Africa - suffered the torturous middle passage in the bellies of slave ships; suffered the brutalizing chains of physical slavery; suffered the crippling shackles of mental bondage, but now are being gloriously resurrected, moved toward their "ancestral power base," and called by their history to redouble the struggle to humanize the world. Armed only with the wisdom of their ancestors, African centered educators seek to perfect and then accelerate this historical process.
The meta-goal of African centered education is to create the conditions on earth where not only African people, but all people, can live in peace free from privation and want, free from exploitation and oppression, free to grow and develop to their fullest.

Conclusion

The African centered view in education is both theory and praxis informed by a world view shaped by the best of the indigenous philosophical principles and cultural practices of African people without regards to time or place. Only in this way is it universal. Like other curricula and pedagogies, it is cultural group specific. In this case, centered in African epistemological and axiological systems and thus uniquely suited for African upliftment, yet all of humanity will benefit from the truths and the outcomes of this emerging educational idea. A little more than 25 years ago, the visionary sage Amiri Baraka wrote in the Mwalimu Texts, "Africans, now, are the unleashed energy that will force change and new vision."13 The African centered perspective in education is most assuredly a dynamic articulation of this righteous, ascending, "unleashed energy" generated to reinforce the movement toward positive "change" by creating a "new vision" for African people in the 21st century.

Glossary

autocentricism - A feature of African centered education that holds that true education is centered in self-knowledge. nationalism - A feature of African centered education that posits that the intergenerational transmission of nation-building and maintenance skills are the sine qua non of African centered education.

Notes and References 1. Clegg, C. (1997). A nation of shopkeepers. In An original man: The life and times of Elijah Muhammad. (pp. 239-240). Clegg reports that by 1972, the Nation of Islam had established 47 independent private schools (p. 252). New York: St. Martin's Press; Lincoln, C. (1961). The Black Muslims in America. Boston: Beacon Press; Essien-Udom, E. (1962). Education of Muslims. In Black nationalism: A search for identity in America. (pp. 253-273) Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
2. Payne, C. (1995). Transitions. In I've got
the light of freedom: The organizing tradition and the Mississippi freedom struggle. (pp. 302-306). Berkeley, CA: University of California Press; Ture, K., & Hamilton, C. (1967). The search for new forms. In Black Power: The politics of liberation in America. (pp. 164-177). New York: Vintage Books; Van Peebles, M, Taylor, U. & Lewis, J. (1995). Growing pains. In Panther: A pictorial history of the Black Panthers. (pp. 119-120). New York: New Market Press.
3. Hotep, U. (2001). Dedicated to
excellence: An Afrocentric oral history of the council of independent Black institutions, 1970-2000. doctoral dissertation. Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, PA.
4. According to the Washington, DC-based
Institute for Independent Education, 90 percent of the nearly 400 independent community-based schools listed in their 1995 Directory were created by African Americans, and enrolled close to 60,000 students, pp. ii,iv.
5. Akoto, A. (1994). Notes on an African
centered pedagogy. In M. Shujaa. (Ed.). Too much schooling, too little education. (p. 322). Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press.
6. Karenga, M. (1986). Restoration of the
Husia: Reviving a sacred legacy. In M. Karenga, & Curruthers, J. (Eds.). Kemet and the African worldview. (p. 93). Los Angeles: University of Sankore Press.
7. Quoted in a Detroit Public Schools
position paper on African Centered Education, p. 12.
8. Rodney, W. (1982). How Europe
underdeveloped Africa. Washington, DC: Howard University Press; Williams, C. (1974). The destruction of Black civilization. Chicago: Third World Press; Ani, M. (1994). Yurugu. Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press; Gallen, D. (1994). Black America: The FBI files. New York: Caroll & Graf.
9. Ani, M. (1996). Kuugusa mtima: The
Afrikan "aesthetic" and national consciousness. In E. Addae. (Ed.), To heal a people: Afrikan scholars defining a new reality. (p. 120). Columbia, MD: Kujichagulia Press.
10. Madhubuti, S. (1994). African-centered
pedagogy. In H. Madhubuti and S. Madhubuti African-centered education (p. 16). Chicago: Third World Press.
11. Shujaa, M. (1996). Coming home again:
Re-Africanization as personal transformation. In E. Addae. (Ed.), To heal a people. (p. 50) Columbia, MD: Kujichaulia Press.
12. Asante, M. (1994). The Afrocentric
project in education. In M. Shujaa, (Ed.), Too much schooling, too little education (p. 397). Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press.
13. Baraka, A. (1969). Mwalimu texts. In
Raise, race, rays, raze: Essays since 1965. (p. 167). New York: Vintage Press.

(A version of this paper was published in Casile, B. (Ed). (1997) Leadership in schools: The national curriculum and self-development in self-governing schools. Oxford, England: Norham Centre for Leadership Studies)

Uhuru Hotep, Ed.D., is the associate director of the Michael P. Weber Learning Skills Center at Duquesne University and the creator of the Johari Sita: The Six Jewels of African Centered Leadership. He holds degrees in African American studies, adult education, and educational leadership.

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THE MIS-EDUCATION OF THE NEGRO


The education of any people should begin with the people themselves.... The chief difficulty with the education of the Negro is that it has been largely imitation resulting in the enslavement of his mind. Dr. Carter G. Woodson,

The Miseducation of the Negro(1933), Full Online Text

THE MIS-EDUCATION OF THE NEGRO | AUDIOBOOK


RBG Street Scholars Think Tank Toolbox and RBGz Video Education Productions









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Comprehensive Media Files Index

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RBG Afrikan- Centered Cultural Development and Education

Public Enemy

Rap Music

Black History Month
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PARTNER COLLEGE:





The Black Liberation Army Presents: THE CHOICE, An Interactive Story Board

Huey P. Newton and 1800-FTP Call In : Police State v Freedom Fighters

"The Revolution is in the Music": A Kol Lesson, Feat. Pac "Only God Can Judge Me" and Outlawz

A History of The Republic of New Afrika


RBG DEFINED: 2008 Updated Lesson


Mumia Abu Jamal Demo in Philadelphia Apr. 19th, 08 plus Mumia Teaching Video Player

A Message to the Hip Hop Grassroots from former Political Prisoner & Black Panther Dhoruba Bin Wahad

Betta B Ready by Ras Ceylon (EXLUSIVE WORLD PREMIERE!!!)

AFRIKAN INSURRECTION MUSIC and T.V. / United Front

RBG: SDL (Self Directed Learning) Black Studies Outline for Advanced Learners

Hip Hop History 101 : A Refreshing Audio Chronology 1970-2005

The RBG SSTT-Aset University Black / New Afrikan Creed... and more

RBG on Computers, SDL (Self Directed Learning) and the Internet as Tools in Liberation

RBGz Hip Hop and Rap Music Wikizine" CLASSIC"

The Honorable Robert F. Williams: "The Teacher They Don't Want You To Know About"

New Afrikan Socio-Educational Networking Is Here, "Decolonizing The African Mind"

The RBG4Lif Revolution of the Mind: "What Dat Be Bout"

RBGz Anti-Niggerization Studies: Ridding the World of Niggers (Niggas)!

RBGz "Be Down Wit Tha Reparations Clique"

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Basic Computer Skills Training /
RBG Core Curriculum Start Page
http://www.softeksolutions.in/images/AnimatedComputer.gif Click for RBG Tags/Key Words Click to download the RBG Toolbar/ College Navigational Organizer RBG U-Page (Your Page to personalize)
Click for the You Tube of Our Video/DVD Africology Library


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