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Children from African American Culture

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Title: Children from African American Culture


1
Children from African American Culture
2
History of African American Roots
  • African Americans and the richness of their
    culture have been a part of the US since its
    founding.
  • Although much of their history has only been
    recently told, African Americans have contributed
    to every aspect of the countrys development.
  • The history of people of African descent in the
    Americas can be traced to the largest involuntary
    migration movement in modern times.

3
History of African American Roots
  • From the 16th to the 19th centuries, nearly 40
    million people from the countries of West Africa
    were forced to leave their homelands and were
    sold into slavery.
  • More than 20 million Africans were brought to the
    countries of Central and South American, the
    Caribbean, and North America.
  • The people of African descent in South America
    and the Caribbean share a heritage of life in the
    Americas different from that of those in North
    America.

4
History of African American Roots
  • The Caribbean descendants of Africa and the new
    African immigrants share a common genealogical
    root with African Americans, but the history of
    the Africans who were brought to the US in
    slavery is different.
  • African Americans are currently the largest
    racial minority group in the US.
  • The more than 35 million blacks in the US are
    largely descended from West Africa.

5
History of African American Roots
  • The history of slavery of Africans in America has
    not only involved economic conditions, but also
    sociocultural and psychological factors that
    influence speech and language.
  • The people called African Americans come from
    several racial stocks and tribes including
    Mandingo, Ibos, Efiks, Hausas, Krus, Yorubas,
    Ashantis, and Sengalese.

6
Language/Linguistic Origins
  • Because the Africans who were brought to this
    country came from various locations in West
    Africa, it is highly likely that they did not
    speak one anothers languages.
  • With no other means to communication, the slaves
    began to use pidgin between themselves and when
    speaking to their masters.
  • With continued use, pidgin developed into the
    primary mode of communication among slaves.
  • African and English words and structures were
    blended by phonologic, syntactic, and semantic
    rules and other systematic linguistic patterns.

7
Language/Linguistic Origins
  • As this English variety became the only language
    used by the members of the slave community,
    children born into this community acquired this
    language as their native tongue.
  • This English was no longer pidgin, but became a
    type of creole language.
  • Some of the English patterns the slaves used were
    forms learned from their overseers or slave
    owners.

8
Language/Linguistic Origins
  • Patterns of African-American English (AAE) such
    as multiple negation (e.g., I dont want no more)
    were acceptable forms of standard American
    English (SAE) during the 17th and 18th centuries.
  • As English evolved, these patterns became
    unacceptable, but slaves had limited contact with
    their slave owners so they had no way of keeping
    up with the evolving nature of language.
  • The retention of this and other SAE forms
    resulted in some of the AAE patterns.

9
Language/Linguistic Origins
  • The slaves also incorporated sounds, grammatical
    markings, and vocabulary from their traditional
    Africa languages into their English.
  • For example, many West African languages have a
    tense called the habitual tense that implies an
    activity of a recurring nature.
  • The habitual tense was relegated to the verb be
    when they learned English.
  • The statement he be going means he usually
    goes or he always goes.

10
Language/Linguistic Origins
  • This linguistic patterns was not only found in
    the language of slaves, but also in a feature of
    AAE and of dialects spoken by many black
    individuals outside of the US.
  • In addition to grammatical features, slaves
    infused West African words into their English.
  • Words with African origins include goober, gumbo,
    yam, tote, cola, jazz, juke (as in jukebox), and
    jive.
  • The word john, meaning the customer of a
    prostitute, is derived from an African word that
    is translated as someone who can be easily
    exploited.

11
Language/Linguistic Origins
  • Additionally, the word okay, and the sounds
    uh-uh for no and uh-huh for yes are also
    thought to have West African origins.
  • A number of linguistic dialects are spoken among
    African Americans in the US.
  • Gullah is spoken by those living on the islands
    off the coasts of South Carolina and Georgia.
  • There are also various Creole dialects such as
    Jamaican Creole and dialects spoken by people who
    immigrated to the US from the Caribbean
    countries.

12
Code Switching
  • The rules for communicative interactions used by
    many African Americans include code switching,
    call and response, wit and sarcasm, and narrative
    style.
  • Code switching involves the speakers ability to
    use the linguistic style (formal or informal),
    dialect, or language is most appropriate for a
    particular communication episode.
  • The language used will depend on the age, race,
    gender, or level of authority of the person with
    whom one is speaking as well as the context of
    the communicative event.

13
Wit and Sarcasm
  • Wit and sarcasm assume a variety of forms by
    African Americans.
  • Some statements are actual sarcasm, such as the
    wife who tells her significantly late-arriving
    husband, You sho got home early.
  • Other forms of wit involve create, verbal
    turn-taking games, such as playing the dozens.
  • Playing the dozens is typically played by
    school-aged black boys.
  • On the surface, playing the dozens reflects
    disrespect of the parent.

14
Turn-Taking
  • On the contrary, because of the love and respect
    the players have for their mothers, a young black
    man who can learn to withstand insults about his
    mother is better prepared to withstand negativism
    and insults that he will face in the future.
  • It is also an excellent way to develop social and
    verbal interaction skills.
  • Turn-taking skills are somewhat different among
    African American speakers.
  • In AAE, it is not necessary to wait until the
    first-speaker has completed his/her turn before
    the next speaker begins.

15
Call and Response
  • Interruptions are acceptable and the
    conversational floor is given to the most
    assertive and aggressive speaker.
  • Call and response is an important turn-taking
    feature of AAE.
  • Call and response is characterized by a choral
    response to an utterance given by a single
    person.
  • Largely noticeable within the church and in
    gospel and rhythm and blues music, call and
    response is also a feature of conversations among
    African Americans.

16
Call and Response
  • There are two specific call-and-response
    patterns
  • a statement produced by one person followed by a
    response by one person and
  • (2) a statement produced by one person followed
    by responses made by people in a group.
  • The first type of call and response occurs mostly
    during a conversational dyad with the listener
    providing a response that is a confirmation or
    acknowledgement of that speakers statement.
  • The second type of call and response is a
    statement produced by one person followed by
    responses made by people in a group.

17
Call and Response
  • It is typically found in church services,
    rallies, and other situations with a main speaker
    and an audience.
  • Nonverbal responses to a speakers statements
    include hand clapping, head shaking and nodding,
    hand waving and lifting, standing up, dancing,
    patting the feet, pointing a finger at the
    speaker, laughing, and crying.
  • In these situations, the speaker not only looks
    for the responses but, when the audience is too
    quiet also encourages the audience to respond by
    calling statements such as Can I get a witness?

18
Call and Response
  • Call and response patterns are considered a
    beneficial communicative feature among those who
    use and understand them, because the respondents
    are providing the speaker with complimentary,
    confirming and positive feedback.
  • However these patterns are subject to
    misinterpretations by people who are unfamiliar
    with this aspect of AAE.
  • AAE speakers using normal call and response
    patterns maybe judged to be rude, interruptive
    and disruptive by those who are are not familiar
    with call and response patterns.

19
Eye Contact
  • Another form of nonverbal behavior which can be
    misinterpreted by SAE speakers is eye contact.
  • African Americans demonstrate attentiveness and
    respect by using indirect eye contact when they
    are listeners and direct eye contact when they
    are speakers.
  • SAE speakers may misinterpret the lack of eye
    contact during listening as inattentive or
    noncaring behavior.
  • Approval or agreement with the speaker may be
    demonstrated nonverbally through touching the
    listener's hand or arm.

20
Conversational Discourse
  • Communication among African Americans is
    considered to be passionate and animated.
  • Conversational style is provocative and
    challenging, and the intensity is focused on the
    validity of the ideas being discussed.
  • Ordinary conversations are often embellished by a
    liberal sprinkling of metaphors and descriptors,
    and body language and emotion are used by the
    more gifted storytellers to illustrate or
    emphasize a point.

21
Conversational Discourse
  • At times, volume and pitch may show greater
    variation than in the mainstream culture.
  • African Americans are high context communicators
    who use shared experience, nonverbal cues and
    signals, and the situation itself as a large part
    of the communicative process.

22
African American Values--Family
  • Values related to family are rooted in African
    traditions.
  • Although slavery disrupted the traditions and
    family relationships that Africans had grown up
    with, it did not eliminate the value of kinship.
  • In fact, kinship bonds became a major means of
    support for slaves.
  • Because both men and women had to work on the
    plantations and tend their own plots to
    supplement the food provided by their owners,
    young children were often cared for by older
    women or older children.

23
African American Values--Family
  • Often, the biological parents had little time or
    direct involvement in the childs upbringing,
    although close, affection bonds were established
    between men and their wives and children, and
    between women, their children, and their
    husbands.
  • Despite the fact that formal marriage among
    slaves was not recognized and family members were
    routinely separated from one another through sale
    to another plantation, family bonds and kinship
    ties remained strong.

24
African American Values--Family
  • My family, my folks, my kin, my people,
    are terms used by African Americans to identify
    blood relatives and others who are not blood
    relatives but have special caring relationships.
  • For African Americans, family is a group of
    people who feel they belong to each other, even
    though they may or may not live in the same
    house.
  • Even today, the demographic status of female
    single head of household does not, in many
    instances, credit the existence of this
    individual in a kinship group of people who care
    about each other and feel they belong together.

25
African American Values--Family
  • The family continues to be a source of strength,
    resilience, and survival.
  • The family also provides socialization, guidance,
    and inspiration.
  • The primary socialization task of the African
    American family is instilling in its members a
    sense of who they are.
  • This includes knowledge of the African heritage,
    the history of the American experience, and how
    the two sources have blended to produce the
    contemporary African American.

26
African American Values--Names
  • African Americans regard their names as extremely
    important.
  • Names for children are selected with great care.
  • They chosen name often reflects the person or
    characteristics the family wishes to reflect or
    some social values, such as faith, hope, or
    chastity.
  • When Africans were brought to this country
    enslaved, they were frequently stripped of their
    given African names and given simple to
    pronounce, one- or two-syllable names.

27
African American Values--Names
  • Slaves often took the last names of their owners.
  • Many African Americans still carry these last
    names.
  • Terrell, for example, was the name of a Georgia
    plantation owner.
  • Some slaves adopted names such as Freeman or
    Newman that expressed their newly, acquired
    freedom.
  • Others took on the names of important historical
    figures, such as Washington and Jefferson.

28
African American Values--Names
  • During slavery and long afterward, white
    individuals rarely addressed African Americans by
    their last names.
  • Regardless of status or age, African Americans
    were called by their first name or were simply
    addressed as boy, girl, uncle, or aunt.
  • The African Americans used a variety of tactics
    to counteract this practice.
  • Some gave their children first names of formal
    address, such as Miss, Princess, Duke, General,
    and Mister.

29
African American Values--Names
  • The slave owners then had little choice but to
    use these titles when talking to or calling them.
  • Like their ancestors, African American parents
    today take great care in selecting names for
    their children.
  • Some African American parents give their children
    African names such as LaShawn, Shemeika,
    Shurtjhana, Latifa, Tanzania, Ivanna Samal, Amani
    Shama, and Elon Jahdal.
  • Many of these names have important meanings, and,
    as the child grows, the parents share these
    meanings with the child.

30
African American Values--Elders
  • Many African American families continue to place
    a high value on respecting and obeying elders.
  • Elderly persons are seen to have wisdom and
    hindsight.
  • They have seen things come around and go
    around, and they have witnessed a lot of what
    the younger generation calls history.
  • In the South, titles of respect, such as maam
    or sir are still widely used.

31
African American Values--Elders
  • Just as in the early African religions, the
    oldest are also believed to have a special status
    and an ability to communicate with God and are
    frequently in charge of prayers.
  • In addition to honoring the special status of
    elderly persons, there is a high value placed on
    obedience to parents as well as other older
    persons, including siblings.
  • The learning of obedience and respect for elders
    is the childs earliest contribution to family
    maintenance and cohesiveness.

32
African American Values--Education
  • The attainment of ones potential through the
    acquisition of education, life skills, and
    personal competence, is a major goal and desired
    achievement.
  • The family nourishes and supports individual
    ability through a strong belief in education as
    the means to a better life.
  • The promise of education is and has been a beacon
    for many African American families.

33
African American Values--Education
  • Individuals who have attained high educational
    goals come not just from the so-called better,
    stronger families, but from families with a
    variety of statuses and fortunes.
  • Families often tell their children that times and
    situations may change, but a good education is
    something no one can take away.
  • Education enables the individual to weather
    changing times.

34
African American Beliefs--Childrearing
  • African American families tend to be more
    flexible about family roles.
  • Fathers and mothers share in child care
    responsibilities, and older siblings carry out
    household chores, including caring for younger
    siblings.
  • African American families are more concerned with
    overcoming obstacles based on racial membership
    than with gender affiliation.
  • African Americans believe that children are the
    future.

35
African American Beliefs--Childrearing
  • Children need to know that they are loved and
    that they belong.
  • Some African American families tend not to be
    especially verbal with the expression of love,
    because they believe that actions, such as
    concerned care giving and attention to others
    well-being, speak louder than words.
  • Children need adult protection and guidance.
  • They must be disciplined, and all responsible
    adults in the community take part in the training
    and discipline of the child.

36
African American Beliefs--Childrearing
  • Discipline is somewhat stricter among African
    American families as they need to teach their
    children about self-respect as a way to learn to
    appreciate the rights of others.
  • The African American community still maintains a
    belief that all responsible adults are expected
    to act in loco parentis for the children in the
    community.
  • The presence of an adult may be enough to deter
    the young African American child from too much
    wrongdoing.

37
African American Beliefs--Childrearing
  • The nonparent adult is just as likely to comment
    on or correct the obvious problem behavior of a
    child in his/her presence.
  • Once young children are able to speak and
    understand, they are expected to obey the family
    rules, to treat others as they want to be
    treated, and to do their schoolwork to the best
    of their ability.
  • African Americans believe that children must have
    a good education, good food, and a place to play.

38
African American BeliefsHealth
  • The belief in eating well, feeding ones family
    well, and having good food to offer ones guests
    is an abiding value in the African American
    family.
  • Good food is believed to be important for
    strength, stamina, and health.
  • Among middle-class families, the diet is
    generally rich in nutrients due to a particular
    preference for dark green leafy vegetables, red
    meat, and cheese.

39
African American BeliefsHealth
  • Potatoes, rice, and bread are staples, and a
    variety of fresh and dried fruits are liked and
    used.
  • Children are switched from baby foods to the same
    food as the rest of the family around one year of
    age.
  • Another belief about health for children has to
    do with the importance of play.
  • Play is seen as important for both social and
    physical well-being.

40
African American BeliefsHealth
  • In African American families, there is an attempt
    to give the child an opportunity to be a child
    and to enjoy the care and protection of
    responsible adults until such time as he/she is
    maturationally ready for a broader role.
  • Medical and preventative care, knowledge about
    treatment, and types of treatment may vary widely
    within the African American community.
  • Most African Americans use the local private
    physician for basic health needs.
  • Many are involved in work-related health plans
    that utilize HMOs as providers.

41
African American BeliefsHealth
  • In those families with strong ties to the rural
    south, holistic, natural approaches to health may
    be preferred.
  • There is an oral compendium of herbs, teas,
    roots, over-the-counter preparations, and foods
    that have preventative health and healing
    properties.
  • Many families still rely on or have their own
    versions of Vicks VapoRub, castor and cod liver
    oil, sassafras tea, dried peaches and apricots,
    and pot liquor.

42
African American BeliefsHealth
  • African American physicians of the old school
    may dispense advice and counsel based on
    knowledge of the individual and his/her family
    context as well as standard medical treatment.
  • Many African Americans lack access to adequate
    health care and do not have medical insurance
    (Terrell Jackson, 2002).
  •  They tend to have a higher mortality rate than
    other groups in some communities.

43
African American BeliefsHealth
  • Lower income, less frequent prenatal care, poorer
    maternal nutrition, and other factors make it
    more difficult for many African Americans to
    raise healthy children.
  • Due to the increasing proportion of African
    American families who live in poverty, or who are
    the working but poor, more families are compelled
    to wait for an illness to occur before seeking
    medical attention.
  • In fact, many poor, inner city families use
    emergency wards for all their health care needs.

44
African American BeliefsHealth
  • Preventative health visits, including routine
    gynecological care, physical check ups, and
    especially dental care, will not be sough.
  • Even though visits for infants and children may
    be less frequent, the family will usually ensure
    that children get the basic s of whatever care
    they need.
  • Sickle cell disease, a hereditary disease of the
    red blood cells affecting Blacks worldwide, has
    been associated with sensorineural hearing loss
    (Scott, 1998).

45
African American BeliefsHealth
  • Many African American children under 6 years of
    age have an elevated level of lead in the blood.
  • This is due in part to lead levels in low-income
    housing.
  • High lead levels are linked to many learning
    problems and health risks.  
  • Elderly African Americans are at greatest risk
    for heart disease and hypertension, and they are
    also at risk for strokes.

46
African American BeliefsIllness
  • Some African Americans believe that the cause of
    illness is punishment for disobeying God, the
    work of the devil, or in some instances, evil
    spirits.
  • Disability is often interpreted in one of two
    ways
  • As bad luck or misfortune and
  • As the result of sins of the father.
  • For the most part, African Americans do not
    exhibit any particular prejudice toward people
    with disabilities.

47
African American BeliefsIllness
  • African American families are often able to
    accept children who have disabilities, especially
    those who are mildly or moderately mentally
    retarded.
  • This acceptance may result, in part, from support
    within the extended family and strong ties with
    the church.
  • In fact, because African Americans are practical
    people, attitudes about the causation of
    disability has no real effect on how they
    interact with families who have a disabled member
    or on how a family with a disabled member
    conducts the business of living.
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