Education for the Revolution
The Legacy of the Black Panther Party's Oakland Community School
Robert P. Robinson(Author)
New York University Press
Will be published approx. on 12. January 2027
Book
Hardback
288 pages
978-1-4798-4197-4 (ISBN)
Description
Traces the history of the Oakland Community School, the last Community Survival Program of the Black Panther Party
Education for the Revolution offers the first comprehensive historical account of the last standing survival program of the Black Panther Party, the Oakland Community School. First established as the Children's House in 1970 and operational until 1982, the Oakland Community School provided grade school children with holistic educational and communal practices that oriented them to the Black Panther Party's political consciousness. Drawing from newspapers, oral histories, and archives, historian Robert P. Robinson links the history of the school to the Black historical tradition of resistance via education, framing the school as a union of Black self-determination and education history.
Robinson situates the Oakland Community School within the Black Panther Party's longstanding commitment to using education as a tool to achieve liberation. Long before terms like restorative justice, gender inclusion, and culturally relevant pedagogy were popular in classrooms, Robinson explores how students of the Oakland Community School were regarded as co-creators of knowledge alongside their teachers, local activists, and parents. Combining personal reflections from parents, students, and former faculty with an analysis of the school's concrete teaching practices, the book asserts that their histories are vital to present-day educational efforts.
Whereas popular narratives of the Black Panther Party argue that their political activism ceased by the early 1970s, this history of the Oakland Community School illuminates Black Panther women's continued efforts to grow power through education. At once compelling and revelatory, Education for the Revolution cements the Oakland Community School's legacy as one of the most enduring Black independent education projects for social justice, as well as a fascinating precursor to critical forms of education seen today.
Education for the Revolution offers the first comprehensive historical account of the last standing survival program of the Black Panther Party, the Oakland Community School. First established as the Children's House in 1970 and operational until 1982, the Oakland Community School provided grade school children with holistic educational and communal practices that oriented them to the Black Panther Party's political consciousness. Drawing from newspapers, oral histories, and archives, historian Robert P. Robinson links the history of the school to the Black historical tradition of resistance via education, framing the school as a union of Black self-determination and education history.
Robinson situates the Oakland Community School within the Black Panther Party's longstanding commitment to using education as a tool to achieve liberation. Long before terms like restorative justice, gender inclusion, and culturally relevant pedagogy were popular in classrooms, Robinson explores how students of the Oakland Community School were regarded as co-creators of knowledge alongside their teachers, local activists, and parents. Combining personal reflections from parents, students, and former faculty with an analysis of the school's concrete teaching practices, the book asserts that their histories are vital to present-day educational efforts.
Whereas popular narratives of the Black Panther Party argue that their political activism ceased by the early 1970s, this history of the Oakland Community School illuminates Black Panther women's continued efforts to grow power through education. At once compelling and revelatory, Education for the Revolution cements the Oakland Community School's legacy as one of the most enduring Black independent education projects for social justice, as well as a fascinating precursor to critical forms of education seen today.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Product notice
Trade binding
Illustrations
14 b/w images; 3 tables
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-4798-4197-4 (9781479841974)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Robert P. Robinson is Assistant Professor of Africana Studies and Gender Studies at John Jay College and Doctoral Faculty in Urban Education, Africana Studies, and Interactive Technology & Pedagogy at The Graduate Center, CUNY.