Provides the first practical, hands-on resource to help early childhood educators create learning environments in which black children thrive.
Afrikan children are naturally precocious and gifted. They begin life with a "natural head start". However, their natural genius is too frequently underdeveloped and misdirected. In this volume, the author...
Readers will learn how to redesign their learning goals, lesson plans, and the texts they use to teach.
Keywords: African American; gifted; cultural influences; achievement; teacher preparation; cultivating genius I recently wrote a book entitled Cultivating the Genius of Black Children: Strategies for Closing the Achievement Gap in the ...
New to this edition is information on leadership connections in school-age care and nurturing leadership in children. Each chapter is designed to prompt self-evaluation and personal leadership development.
“Genius. is. a. terrible. thing. to. waste,. but. a. glorious. thing. to. cultivate.” —DEBRA REN-ETTA SULLIVAN, CULTIVATING THE ... Cultivating the genius of black children: Strategies to close the achievement gap in the early years.
“Genius. is. a. terrible. thing. to. waste,. but. a. glorious. thing. to. cultivate.” —DEBRA REN-ETTA SULLIVAN, CULTIVATING THE ... Cultivating the genius of black children: Strategies to close the achievement gap in the early years.
“Genius. is. a. terrible. thing. to. waste,. but. a. glorious. thing. to. cultivate.” —DEBRA REN-ETTA SULLIVAN, CULTIVATING THE ... Cultivating the genius of black children: Strategies to close the achievement gap in the early years.
“Genius. is. a. terrible. thing. to. waste,. but. a. glorious. thing. to. cultivate.” —DEBRA REN-ETTA SULLIVAN, CULTIVATING THE ... Cultivating the genius of black children: Strategies to close the achievement gap in the early years.
Institutions like the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) and the National Black Child ... Helps Black Children Learn Debra Ren-Etta Sullivan (2016), the author of Cultivating the Genius of Black Children, ...
Is Whitney Johnson (2012), author of Dare, Dream, Do, really urging us to create bumps in our road so we can tumble and find new ways to get up again? She is clear that “the status quo has a powerful undertow, no doubt” (147).