Black History Education Conference

The 6th Annual Black History Education Conference will provide a venue where educators across the state and country will be able to share policies, practices, programs, and procedures that have proven effective in promoting high levels of achievement for those often being under served in our school systems and communities.

Interested in becoming a conference sponsor? Inquires can be sent via email to conferences@education.wisc.edu.

When: February 16-17, 2024

Conference Program

*Information about the 2025 Black History Education Conference will be posted as soon as it is available.

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Keynote: From History To Destiny: Centering Black Academic and Cultural Excellence

9:30a-9:50a | Room D1630

Back by popular demand, this year’s keynote speaker Dr. Chike Akua will be joining us face-to-face in Madison!

Dr. Akua is an Assistant Professor of Educational Leadership at Clark Atlanta University and a leading authority on increasing the achievement of today’s students, especially those in some of the most challenging schools and communities.  His cultural proficiency, equity and accountability work is known nationally for assisting school systems in improving school and community climate and culture.

As a recognized master teacher and leadership strategist, Dr. Akua is one of the most sought-after speakers at regional and national conferences, urban school districts, colleges and universities. With a culturally relevant approach toward closing access and opportunity gaps, he is known for his dynamic, interactive presentations to teachers, leaders, parents, and students.

Dr. Akua is a former Teacher of the Year who has been recognized in two states (VA and GA) for teaching excellence. He was also selected as one of Ebony magazine’s “50 Leaders of Tomorrow.” Deeply committed to culturally relevant and responsive pedagogy and instructional materials, Dr. Akua has written and published several books and parent/teacher guides designed for today’s students.

Education for Transformation: The Keys to Releasing the Genius of African American Students is a book for teachers and leaders that is used in a number of urban school districts for professional development. It is also used in a number of colleges and universities for preparation of pre-service teachers and leaders.

Learn more about Dr. Akua at www.drakua.net.

Featured Sessions

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Our Journey

During this time in our history, many people have asked what they can do to take action toward ending systemic racism. Now, in our sixth year of offering the Black History Education Conference, we knew before this issue took center stage that culturally relevant professional development was one way to eliminate the attitude, opportunity, and achievement gaps that exist across the globe. Our answer is to bring forth solutions that will help us eliminate the stark gaps that exist in the state of Wisconsin and across our country.

The itinerary for our journey this year will be guided by what we call the B.R.E.A.T.H. Board. The B.R.E.A.T.H. Board outlines how we organize our action steps toward fulfilling our mission and goals for breathing new life into our instructional practices and children. The B.R.E.A.T.H. Board also serves to help answer the question, “What can we do to take action toward ending systemic racism?”

BBlack History Education Conference–The Black History Education Conference experience is intended to provide a venue where stakeholders across the state and country will be able to share policies, practices, programs, and procedures that have proven effective in promoting high levels of achievement for Black students. 

R–Relevant Texts–”Dreaming In Ethnic Melodies” by Andreal Davis is a book that allows the reader to take a trip through the heart and mind of a mother as she shares her hopes and dreams for her son as he navigates the journey from childhood to adulthood. The author draws from lessons learned from prominent African American historical and contemporary figures to impart wisdom and equip him with the necessary tools and information he needs to move through and to success as an African American male in modern day society.

E–Ethnic Melodies is a culturally relevant literacy curriculum that includes five responsive literacy categories and 21 culturally relevant lesson plans.

A–Affirmations and Academic Breath Bags–The “I Am Somebody” affirmation can be used to help students speak into existence what you want them to believe about themselves and what you as a teacher, family, or community member want them to know you believe about them, as well. The academic “Breath Bag” is a culturally relevant “school in a backpack” that includes age appropriate reading, science, social studies, math, and art or music activities. The activities are designed to promote positive identity development/self-esteem, enhance academic achievement, and bridge the digital divide.

TTestimonials in support of our work provide qualitative data around the impacts of our collective work and responsibility.

H–Health Disparities–With a focus on the newly created program called “The Afr I CAN cer Project,” Cultural Practices That Are Relevant will partner with community organizations and Black History Education Conference attendees to implement the Afr I CAN cer Project. The goals of the project include reducing inequities, creating awareness, implementing education activities, conducting outreach, and developing programs for underserved populations.

Our Story

Andreal De-Ette Davis received a Bachelor of Science Degree in Elementary Education in 1986 and a Master of Science Degree in Curriculum and Instruction in 1995 from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She also holds a certificate in Educational Administration from Edgewood College in Madison, Wisconsin. Convinced of the importance of family and community in a child’s education, Davis has been instrumental in forming family-school relationships ever since she began her teaching in 1986 at Abraham Lincoln Elementary School in Madison, Wisconsin.

She was formerly co-director, along with her husband Arlington, of the African American Ethnic Academy, an academic and cultural enrichment program that convened on Saturday mornings and during the summer. As a product of the research she did while serving as co-director at the African American Ethnic Academy she created a reading curriculum called “Ethnic Melodies” that focuses on African American children’s literature and culturally responsive teaching. Andreal and her husband Arlington have three sons, twenty- six year-old Ari, thirty two year-old Armani and thirty-eight-year old Arlington, all of whom participated in the Academy.

She formerly served as an Elementary Educator, Title I Reading Instructor, Parent Involvement Coordinator, Instructional Resource Teacher for Cultural Relevance, Assistant Director of Equity and Family Involvement and the nation’s first Director of African American Student Achievement with the Madison Metropolitan School District in Wisconsin. Combining all of those experiences she collaboratively created a professional development model called Cultural Practices that are Relevant (CPR) that promotes and supports Culturally and Linguistically Responsive Teaching. She also previously served as Wisconsin’s Statewide Culturally Responsive Practices Coordinator at the Wisconsin Response to Intervention Center and is CEO/FOUNDER of Cultural Practices That Are Relevant Educational Consulting Firm.

In her former role as Statewide Coordinator she led work along with a team of colleagues, training practitioners across the state of Wisconsin and nationally from a model she co-created called the Model to Inform Culturally Responsive Practices that focuses on what it means to be culturally responsive starting with self and moving that work across an entire multi- level system of support. Her most recent work led her to create Wisconsin’s first Black History Education Conference in February 2018. Over 400 educators and students from across Wisconsin and the country attend the conference annually.

The conference highlights 22 promising practices for celebrating and cultivating Black students’ strengths and supporting Black student success. In the past few years Andreal has received various awards. She was the recipient of the NBC 15 News Crystal Apple Award in 2000, UW-Madison Lois Gadd Nemec Distinguished Elementary Education Alumni Award in 2004, Order of the Eastern Star Mother Full Of Grace Award in 2004, the Milken National Educator Award in 2004 and the YWCA Woman of Distinction Award 2013.


At Cultural Practices That Are Relevant (CPR) our work focuses on “Breathing New Life Into Our Instructional Practices and Children.”

In an effort to promote, honor and protect the wealth of Black educational practices and promote increased racial identity and achievement in Black children, Cultural Practices That Are Relevant is a national education consulting firm that provides culturally relevant conferences, coaching, workshops, curriculum development, and public speaking to early childhood, K-12, and higher education institutions across the United States.

We strive to draw from our highest order models and traditional ways of being and knowing to bring the best that we have to offer by mobilizing and sharing research based best practices and models that exist across the country. In doing so, the foundation of our work will be to learn from the past to create the future, Sankofa, and come together in a way that demonstrates the philosophy of Ubuntu—“I am because we are”—to make and take action toward closing achievement, attitude, and opportunity gaps that will allow our children to see and be the highest order model of their “possible selves.”

Our signature event is the annual Black History Education Conference, now in its sixth year, with an ever-increasing number of participants across Wisconsin and wider growing participation across the United States. Our 300-plus past attendees have included:

  • PK-16+ Educators: Early childhood representatives; K-12 school personnel; and higher education institutions including Edgewood College, UW–Madison, UW–Eau Claire, and UW–Whitewater
  • Church Members and Community Organizations: Urban League of Greater Madison, Overture Center for the Arts, Wisconsin State Historical Society, and more
  • State Officials: State Superintendent Carolyn Stanford Taylor, Dane County Executive Joe Parisi, UW–Madison Interim Chief Diversity Officer Cheryl Gittens, and representatives from the Wisconsin Education Council
  • Nationally-known Education Consultants: Dr. Gloria Ladson Billings and Dr. Mahalia Hines, mother of the Grammy award winning actor/performer Common

Another goal of Cultural Practices That Are Relevant is to bring people together to share what we know will change the data that places Wisconsin among the lowest on the Department of Education and NAEP lists in graduation rates, reading scores, standardized math scores, out of school suspensions, prison rates, experiencing poverty, health disparities, and other areas for Black students and families who call Wisconsin “home”.

2020 Black History Education Conference Clip

If you have a purpose for which you can believe, there’s no end to the amount of things you can accomplish.

Marian Anderson

Contact

If you have questions about the 6th Annual Black History Education Conference, please email PLACE Conference and Event Planning Services at conferences@education.wisc.edu.