Venus Evans-Winters Archives | Books for Black Kids https://booksforblackkids.com/book-author/venus-evans-winters/ Representation in Literature Fri, 14 Mar 2025 12:27:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://booksforblackkids.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/cropped-Screenshot-2024-07-22-204808-32x32.png Venus Evans-Winters Archives | Books for Black Kids https://booksforblackkids.com/book-author/venus-evans-winters/ 32 32 Investing in the Educational Success of Black Women and Girls https://booksforblackkids.com/books/investing-in-the-educational-success-of-black-women-and-girls/ https://booksforblackkids.com/books/investing-in-the-educational-success-of-black-women-and-girls/#respond Thu, 22 Aug 2024 01:08:01 +0000 https://booksforblackkids.com/?post_type=books&p=4208 “In the powerful essays that make up Investing in the Educational Success of Black Women and Girls, Black women and […]

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“In the powerful essays that make up Investing in the Educational Success of Black Women and Girls, Black women and girls are listened to, appreciated and valued in recognition of the unrelenting challenges to our existence in a world that continues to be committed to stifling our voices. What these authors know intimately is that such stifling is not because what Black women and girls are saying isn’t important: It is precisely because it is.

This book names the challenges Black women and girls continue to experience as we pursue our education and offers implications and recommendations for practitioners, teachers, administrators, and policymakers. [It] needs to be read widely and deeply studied as much for its formations and beautiful representations of Black women and girls as its recommendations. It is the truth-telling we need today and a groundbreaking resource we need today and beyond.”
–Cynthia B. Dillard(Nana Mansa II of Mpeasem, Ghana), Athens, Georgia; and Cape Coast, Central Region, Ghana

While figures on Black women and girls’ degree attainment suggest that as a group they are achieving in society, the reality is that their experiences are far from monolithic, that the educational system from early on and through college imposes barriers and inequities, pushing many out of school, criminalizing their behavior, and leading to a high rate of incarceration.

The purpose of this book is to illuminate scholarship on Black women and girls throughout the educational pipeline. The contributors–all Black women educators, scholars, and advocates–name the challenges Black women and girls face while pursuing their education as well as offer implications and recommendations for practitioners, policymakers, teachers, and administrators to consider in ensuring the success of Black women and girls.

This book is divided into four sections, each identifying the barriers Black girls and women encounter at the stages of their education and offering strategies to promote their success and agency within and beyond educational contexts.

In Part One, the contributors explore the importance of mattering for Black girls in terms of redefining success and joy; centering Black girl literacy pedagogies that encourage them to thrive; examining how to make STEM more accessible to them; and recounting how Black girls’ emotions and emotional literacy can either disempower them or promote their sense of agency to navigate educational contexts.

Part Two uncovers the violence directed toward and the criminalization of Black women and girls, and how they are situated in educational and justice systems that collude to fail them. The contributors address incarceration and the process of rehabilitation and reentry; the outcomes of disciplinary action in schools on women who pursue college; and describe how the erasure and disregard of Black women and girls leaves them absent from the educational policies that deeply affect their lives and wellbeing.

Part Three focuses on how Black women are left to navigate without resources that could make their collegiate pathways smoother; covers how hair politics impact their acceptance in college leadership roles, particularly at HBCUs; illuminates the importance of social/emotional and mental health for Black undergraduate women and the lack of adequate resources; and explores how women with disabilities navigate higher education.

The final part of this book describes transformative approaches to supporting the educational needs of Black women and girls, including the use of a politicized ethic of care, intergenerational love and dialogue, and constructing communities, including digital environments, to ensure they thrive through their education and beyond.

Investing in the Educational Success of Black Women and Girls
Edited by Charlotte Jacobs, Lori D. Patton, Venus E. Evans-Williams
Contributions by Cynthia B. Dillard

Source: Publisher (Stylus Publishing, LLC; Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group)

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Teaching Black Girls: Resiliency in Urban Classrooms https://booksforblackkids.com/books/teaching-black-girls-resiliency-in-urban-classrooms/ https://booksforblackkids.com/books/teaching-black-girls-resiliency-in-urban-classrooms/#respond Fri, 16 Aug 2024 17:59:45 +0000 https://booksforblackkids.com/?post_type=books&p=4143 In this updated volume of Teaching Black Girls: Resiliency in Urban Classrooms, Venus E. Evans-Winters uses qualitative research methods to […]

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In this updated volume of Teaching Black Girls: Resiliency in Urban Classrooms, Venus E. Evans-Winters uses qualitative research methods to interpret and discuss school resilience in the lives of African American female students. The book demonstrates how these girls are simultaneously one of the most vulnerable, and one of the most resilient group of students. Teaching Black Girls implements alternative approaches to the study of the intersection of race, class, and gender on schooling, deliberately highlighting how students growing up and attending schools in urban neighborhoods are educationally resilient in the face of adversity. Through dialogue and self-reflection, the author and participants in the ethnographic study documented here reconstruct and tell stories of resilience to derive practice that is both gender and culturally relevant. Teaching Black Girls has research and practice implications for graduate students, advanced pre-service teachers, and school practitioners.

Teaching Black Girls: Resiliency in Urban Classrooms
Written by Venus Evans-Winters

Source: Amazon.com, Publisher (Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers)

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