The Myth of Black Anti-Intellectualism: A True Psychology of African American Students (Practical and Applied Psychology)
Book Details
Description
Why do students who belong to racial minority groups―particularly black students―fall short in school performance? This book provides a comprehensive and critical examination of black identity and its implications for black academic achievement and intellectualism.
• Uses African American identity as the framework to understand academic achievement and to expose the biases of "deficit thinking" that presumes that under-achievement among black students is related to deficiencies in motivation, intelligence, culture, or socialization
• Presents information and viewpoints informed by empirical research in a manner that is accessible to general readers and non-specialists
• Uses personal anecdotes and examples from popular culture to connect with readers and better illustrate the validity of the author's strengths-based approach rather than the conventional deficit-based approach
• Challenges the idea that black students are inherently anti-intellectual and do not value school as much as their non-black peers
