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Urban Education and Academic Success: The Case of Higher Achieving Black Males
Urban Education (2019)
  • Felix Kumah-Abiwu
Abstract
America’s urban communities have continued to face many challenges, especially the challenge of education, for several decades. Although factors such as racial injustice and community-driven problems have been used to explain the educational disparities in predominantly Black urban communities, many Black students, particularly males, have been performing well in the public/magnet school system (K-12). Drawing on a field study conducted at Capital Preparatory Magnet School (CPMS) in Hartford, Connecticut, the findings of the study show that CPMS has not only developed an institutional culture of excellence, but elements of the culture have shaped the school’s academic success for many years.
Keywords
  • Black males,
  • high-achieving,
  • public/magnet schools,
  • urban education,
  • institutional culture
Publication Date
Spring March 6, 2019
Citation Information
Felix Kumah-Abiwu. "Urban Education and Academic Success: The Case of Higher Achieving Black Males" Urban Education (2019)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/felix_kumah-abiwu/29/