The Answers Come from The People: The Highlander Folk School and the Pedagogies of the Civil Rights Movement

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Abstract

Scholars have demonstrated that a range of institutions, organizations, and social movement schools aimed to advance the civil rights movement through education. What remains unclear is how those institutions balanced conversation, direct instruction, role-play, and other pedagogical methods. This article focuses on the Highlander Folk School, a radical, racially integrated institution located in the hills of Tennessee. Drawing upon audio tapes of civil rights workshops at Highlander, I argue that the folk school's workshops blended a variety of pedagogical styles in a way that previous scholarship has failed to acknowledge, and that close attention to Highlander's varied pedagogies can help us rethink the relationship between education and the civil rights movement.

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APA

Slate, N. (2022). The Answers Come from The People: The Highlander Folk School and the Pedagogies of the Civil Rights Movement. History of Education Quarterly, 62(2), 191–210. https://doi.org/10.1017/heq.2022.4

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