Teachers' Views and Uses of Hip Hop Culture Andrew Herman Mannheimer

Teachers' Views and Uses of Hip Hop Culture Andrew Herman Mannheimer

Florida State University Libraries 2016 Teachers' Views and Uses of Hip Hop Culture Andrew Herman Mannheimer Follow this and additional works at the FSU Digital Library. For more information, please contact [email protected] FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES AND PUBLIC POLICY TEACHERS’ VIEWS AND USES OF HIP HOP CULTURE By ANDREW MANNHEIMER A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Sociology in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy 2016 Andrew Mannheimer defended this dissertation on June 27, 2016. The members of the supervisory committee were: John Reynolds Professor Directing Dissertation Robert Schwartz University Representative Irene Padavic Committee Member Daniel Tope Committee Member The Graduate School has verified and approved the above-named committee members, and certifies that the dissertation has been approved in accordance with university requirements. ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank God for all of your many blessings and for giving me the strength to complete this project. I pray that I may glorify your holy name in all that I do. I would also like to thank my family. To my parents, Doug and Cricket, thank you for providing me with love and support throughout my life and especially during this process. I would not be a sociologist had it not been for the values you instilled in me. To George, thank you for being the best brother anyone could ask for, helping me look on the bright side of all situations. I would also like to give sincere gratitude to the Florida State University Department of Sociology. Thank you John Reynolds for serving as my dissertation chair. I greatly appreciate all of the time and energy you put into this project, from discussing ideas and reviewing interview protocols, outlines, and drafts. It has been an absolute pleasure working with you! Thank you Irene Padavic for the invaluable writing and interview skills you taught me over the years. Your energy and passion inspires me to be a better scholar. Thank you Bob Schwartz for agreeing to serve as my outside committee member. Your expertise has made a great contribution to this project. Thank you Dane Tope for serving on my committee, as well as providing me with encouragement and insight throughout this process. There are other faculty members outside of my dissertation committee I would like to acknowledge. Thank you Lisa Weinberg for working with me to develop the Sociology of Hip Hop Culture class. I am very grateful for the opportunity to work alongside you all these years and have learned to “strike while the iron is hot!” Thank you Hernan Ramirez for meeting with me several times to discuss research ideas and exchange music. I am fortunate to have you as a friend. iii I would also like to thank the staff of the Florida State University Department of Sociology. Thank you Jamie Yeargan, Lettie Keen, Kim McClellan, and Christy Crotty for working daily to ensure that students have an excellent experience in the graduate program. iv TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT ................................................................................................................................... vi 1. INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................................1 2. TEACHERS’ VIEWS OF HIP HOP CULTURE ....................................................................14 3. TEACHERS’ USES OF HIP HOP CULTURE .......................................................................59 4. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS ..................................................................................106 APPENDICES .............................................................................................................................116 A. INITIAL INTERVIEW SCHEDULE .....................................................................................116 B. REVISED INTERVIEW SCHEDULE ...................................................................................117 C. DEMOGRAPHIC FACT SHEET ...........................................................................................119 D. HUMAN SUBJECTS COMMITTEE APPROVAL ...............................................................120 E. HUMAN SUBJECTS COMMITTEE REAPPOVAL ............................................................121 F. HUMAN SUBJECTS COMMITTEE REAPPOVAL ............................................................122 G. CONSENT FORM ..................................................................................................................123 H. SCHOOL APPROVAL...........................................................................................................124 I. SCHOOL APPROVAL. ...........................................................................................................126 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................127 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH .......................................................................................................140 v ABSTRACT This dissertation investigates teachers’ views and uses of Hip Hop culture. Many sociologists have used cultural capital theory to explain educational disparities among social groups. Cultural capital theory posits that because schools value and reward dominant cultural capital, low-income students of color are placed at a troubling disadvantage. Previous research has found that low-income, minority youth feel as though their non-dominant cultural capital is devalued within educational settings, especially by teachers. Little is known, however, of the actual views teachers have in regard to non-dominant cultural capital. In regard to teachers use of Hip Hop culture various studies have documented cases of Hip Hop being brought into classroom lesson plans by experts as a form of culturally relevant pedagogy. However, most Hip Hop based education studies do not examine the experiences of in-service teachers. This work contributes to both the literature on cultural capital theory and the literature on culturally relevant pedagogy by exploring teachers’ views and uses of Hip Hop culture. Data come from in-depth interviews with 24 secondary teachers serving in two low-income, high- minority schools. Transcripts of interviews are analyzed through coding, sorting, local integration, and inclusive integration. Findings reveal that while some teachers held positive views of Hip Hop culture (explaining how artists shed light on important social issues), the majority held negative views, expressing concern over how Hip Hop distracted students from school, broadcast sexist images and lyrics, encouraged illegal drug activity, promoted violence, focused on materialism, and spoke out against authority. Teachers also believed that earlier forms of music were more positive than the newer music their students consumed. vi In regards to teaching, findings reveal that several teachers occasionally played edited Hip Hop music in their classrooms and brought Hip Hop into lesson plans with varying levels of success. Several younger black teachers brought Hip Hop into their classrooms in continual and organic fashions, connecting course material to Hip Hop references. Some teachers also relied on their knowledge of Hip Hop to implement effective classroom management techniques. Factors that impeded Hip Hop’s inclusion into the classroom included teacher’s concern over content, administrative surveillance, and teachers not seeing Hip Hop as necessary to their pedagogy. vii CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION “This album is dedicated to all the teachers that told me I’d never amount to nothing.” The Notorious B.I.G (1994), Hip Hop artist “I felt so inspired by what my teacher said/ Said I’d either be dead or be a reefer head/ Not sure that’s how adults should speak to kids/ Especially when the only thing I did was speak in class.” Jay-Z (2009), Hip Hop artist “Think about the culture for a second. Jay-Z, on his latest album, hit album, he’s using the ‘n-word’ repeatedly. You think, 'what is going on here?' [Think about] Snoop Dogg. It’s pornographic! And it invites people to think authentic blackness is, you’ve got to be Hip Hop, you’ve got to be hard. Education—not valued. To me, this is the tragedy of our day.” Juan Williams (2013), journalist and political analyst for Fox News Hip Hop culture has had a complex relationship with the broader American society. Some scholars have commended Hip Hop’s ability to give a voice to historically disenfranchised people and bring different demographics together through a shared interest in the culture’s elements (Dyson 2007; Stout 2011). Others have criticized Hip Hop for exacerbating racial stereotypes, as well as promoting norms and behaviors that are seen as incompatible with upward social mobility (Ferguson 2001; McWhorter 2003). This complex relationship is perhaps best highlighted within with the institution of education. Several Hip Hop artists, such The Notorious B.I.G. and Jay-Z, have expressed their disdain for schools because of poor relationships with teachers. Critics of Hip Hop, such as Juan Williams, have denounced Hip Hop for undervaluing education and impeding progress towards racial equality. In order to address the disconnect between Hip Hop and education, a growing body of work has called for the incorporation of Hip Hop in schools as a form of culturally relevant pedagogy (Emdin 2013; Hill and Petchauer 2013; Ladson-Billings 2013; Prier 2012).

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    153 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us