Idabelle Yeiser

Onye Amerịka na-ede uri na onye Odee
Idabelle Yeiser
mmádu
ụdịekerenwanyị Dezie
ụbọchị ọmụmụ ya1897 Dezie
ọrụ ọ na-arụodee akwụkwọ, odee uri Dezie
ebe agụmakwụkwọAsbury Park High School Dezie

Idabelle Yeiser (amụrụ c. 1900, nwụrụ na 24 Septemba 1954) bụ nwanyị America nwanyị na-ede uri, ode akwụkwọ na onye nkuzi, bụ akụkụ nke New Negro Movement na Philadelphia . [1] [2] [3]

Ndụ mmalite na agụmakwụkwọ

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Yeiser bụ ada John G. Yeiser, onye ụkọchukwu na Chọọchị Episcopal Methodist nke Africa . [4] Ọ gụsịrị akwụkwọ na Asbury Park High School na 1918, [5] na site na New Jersey State Normal School na Montclair na 1920. [6] O nwetara akara ugo mmụta bachelor na Mahadum Pennsylvania, na-aga n'ihu na ọmụmụ ihe na Paris na Madrid. [7] [8] Na 1940, ọ nwetara akara ugo mmụta doctorate na agụmakwụkwọ na Teachers College, Mahadum Columbia . [9]

Ọrụ

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Yeiser kuziri ụlọ akwụkwọ na klaasị asụsụ nkeonwe [10] na Camden, New Jersey na na Filadelfia. [11] A maara ya maka iji ụmụ nkịta akụzi ihe. [12] Ọ bụ onye prọfesọ mmụta na Mahadum Dillard site na 1943 ruo 1946, [9] [13] bụ prọfesọ agụmakwụkwọ na Cheyney College na 1950, [14] ma bụrụ onye osote prọfesọ agụmakwụkwọ na kọleji Brooklyn na 1950s. [15]

N'afọ ndị 1930, Yeiser bụ nwanyị ịnyịnya na-emeri ihe nrite na Philadelphia. [16] Ọ bụ onye na-agba ajụjụ ọnụ na Mississippi Health Project, na-arụ ọrụ na Melva L. Price na Dorothy Boulding Ferebee, n'etiti ndị ọzọ. [17] Na 1945, ọ bụ onye ndụmọdụ na Oklahoma City Negro Teachers' Institute. [18]

Yeiser na-agbasi mbọ ike na ngagharị udo. Ọ bụ onye so na Philadelphia isi nke Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, na mmalite 1930s nwere akwụkwọ akụkọ na Philadelphia Tribune, nke akpọrọ "Peace Corner." [19] N'oge ọkọchị 1947, ọ bụ otu n'ime ndị nnọchi anya America isii na nzukọ ọmụmụ UNESCO na France. [20] [21]

Na-arụ ọrụ

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  • "Echoes nke Toulouse, France" (1926, The Crisis ) [11]
  • Ọnọdụ: Akwụkwọ nke Amaokwu (1937)
  • "Ihe mere na otu esi akụzi French nye ụmụntakịrị" (1939, Akwụkwọ akụkọ Asụsụ nke Oge A ) [10]
  • Usoro ọmụmụ dị ka ihe jikọrọ ike maka agbụrụ dị iche iche (1943) [22]
  • "Onye Ozizi gafere Akwụkwọ ọgụgụ" (1944, The Southwestern Journal )
  • Lyric na akụkọ mgbe ochie (1947)
  • "Ihe ndetu na Nzukọ UNESCO" (1949) [23]
  • "Atumatu nkuzi nkuzi abuo" (1953, Journal of Teacher Education ) [15]
  • "Otu Essay on Creativity" (1953, Arts and Activities ) [24]

Ndụ onwe onye

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Yeiser nwụrụ na 1954.

Ntụaka

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na Philadelphia isi nke Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, na mmalite 1930s nwere akwụkwọ akụkọ na Philadelphia Tribune, nke akpọrọ "Peace Corner." N'oge ọkọchị 1947, ọ bụ otu n'ime ndị nnọchi anya America isii na nzukọ ọmụmụ UNESCO na France

  1. Bracks (2014). "Yeiser, Idabelle", in Lean'tin L. Bracks: Black Women of the Harlem Renaissance Era. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 978-0-8108-8543-1. 
  2. West (2003). "Philadelphia and the Harlem Renaissance", in Aberjhani: Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4381-3017-0. 
  3. Lorraine Elena Roses (1996). "Biographical Notes: Idabelle Yeiser", Harlem's Glory: Black Women Writing, 1900-1950. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-37269-6. 
  4. Yeiser (1928). Texts and Talks: By the Late Rev. John G. Yeiser (in en). A.M.E. Book Concern. 
  5. "Graduate Entertains", Asbury Park Press, 1918-06-29, pp. 2. Retrieved on 2022-02-06.
  6. "Normal School Graduates", The Montclair Times, 1920-06-12, pp. 18. Retrieved on 2022-02-06.
  7. "New Jersey School Teachers Sail for European Vacation", The New York Age, 1925-07-03, pp. 2. Retrieved on 2022-02-06.
  8. "Educator to Speak at Harvard", California Eagle, 1943-07-08, pp. 2. Retrieved on 2022-02-06.
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Dr. Idabelle Yeiser Becomes Professor of Education at Dillard", The New York Age, 1943-04-24, pp. 4. Retrieved on 2022-02-06.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Yeiser (1939). "The Why and How of Teaching French to Little Children" (in en). The Modern Language Journal 23 (8): 591–593. DOI:10.1111/j.1540-4781.1939.tb02850.x. ISSN 1540-4781. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 Yeiser (August 1926). "Echoes of Toulouse, France". The Crisis 32: 191–192. 
  12. "Her Puppets are Linguists", The Philadelphia Inquirer, 1952-03-09, pp. 172. Retrieved on 2022-02-06.
  13. "Teachers to Hear Rep. Judd and Dr. Yeiser", The Belleville News-Democrat, 1948-03-17, pp. 5. Retrieved on 2022-02-06.
  14. "St. Matthew's Plans Women's Day Service", The Morning News, 1950-01-14, pp. 12. Retrieved on 2022-02-06.
  15. 15.0 15.1 Yeiser (December 1953). "Two Student Teaching Programs". Journal of Teacher Education 4 (4): 300–302. DOI:10.1177/002248715300400413. ISSN 0022-4871. 
  16. Penn. "Idabelle Yeiser Wins First Place", The Pittsburgh Courier, 1936-06-13, pp. 8. Retrieved on 2022-02-06.
  17. Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, The 1938 Mississippi Health Project (AKA Publications No. 5, December 1938).
  18. "Dillard Educator Back from Tour", The Pittsburgh Courier, 1945-03-24, pp. 11. Retrieved on 2022-02-06.
  19. Plastas (2011). A band of noble women : racial politics in the women's peace movement, Internet Archive, Syracuse, N.Y. : Syracuse University Press, 37, 159, 177. ISBN 978-0-8156-3257-3. 
  20. Albersheim. "Pupils Hear Minister, Doctor on Tolerance", Asbury Park Press, 1948-02-18, pp. 13. Retrieved on 2022-02-06.
  21. (July 27, 1947) "American Educators Appointed for UNESCO Summer Seminar". The Department of State Bulletin 17: 181. 
  22. Yeiser (1943). The Curriculum as an integrating force for ethnic variations (in en). Cambridge, Etats-Unis d'Amérique: Massachusetes : Harvard University. 
  23. Yeiser (1949). "Notes on a UNESCO Conference". The Journal of Education 132 (2): 44–47. DOI:10.1177/002205744913200207. ISSN 0022-0574. 
  24. Yeiser (May 1953). "An Essay on Creativity". Arts and Activities 33: 36–37, 49.