Abstract
This review explores Edmin’s “Science education for the hip-hop generation” by documenting how he frames hip-hop as a means to access urban student culture. He argues that hip-hop is more than a mere music genre, but rather a culture that provides young people with ways of connecting to the world. Two primary ideas emerged as central to his work. First, he contends that students develop communal relationships and collective identities based on the common experiences expressed in hip-hop. Second, he identifies how the conscious recognition of institutional oppression serves a central feature in urban schools. Emdin’s rich, and personal call for a greater understanding of hip-hop culture provides the text with an unmatched strength. He skillfully uses personal narratives from his own experience as well as quotes and references from hip-hop songs to make the nuances of hip hop transparent to science educators. Conversely, the limitation of this text is found in its unfulfilled promise to provide pragmatic examples of how to engage in a hip-hop based science education. Emdin’s work is ultimately valuable as it extends our current knowledge about urban students and hip-hop in meaningful ways.
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Emdin, C. (2010). Science education for the hip-hop generation. Rotterdam: Sense Publishers.
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Morrell, E., & Duncan-Andrade, J. (2002). Promoting academic literacy with urban youth engaging hip-hop culture. The English Journal, 91, 88–92.
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Brown, B. Hip-hop as a resource for understanding the urban context. Cult Stud of Sci Educ 5, 521–524 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11422-010-9269-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11422-010-9269-3