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K-12 Teachers Seek Out Lesson in African-Latin American Links – UCLA International Institute, California

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A ten-day workshop for local educators provides much-needed evidence that heritages of Latina/o and African American students intersect.

“This summer, 17 Los Angeles–area schoolteachers in a ten-day training workshop at UCLA learned about Haitian Vodou customs, African influences in Mexican music, and challenges faced by their colleagues at various levels of K-12 instruction. The July 22–Aug. 3 workshop on “Africa-Latin American Intersections: Cultural Synergies through the Centuries” was co-sponsored by UCLA’s African Studies Center and Latin American Center, in part through a U.S. Department of Education grant.

From perspectives as different as ethnomusicology and political science, lecturers at the workshop looked at contributions of people of African heritage to the development of Latin America. For example, participants learned about the Abakuá society, a mutual aid society established by Africans in Cuba circa 1836 on the model of similar West African groups. In another session, UCLA Professor Steve Loza pinpointed the African influences in some of the most widely recognized forms of Mexican music, such as the son mexicano.”

Posted on: October 11th, 2006
Curation from Tomás
Filed Under: Cultura, Education, Top Stories
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