Hip Hop Scholars: Jody Lykes Details the Experiences of w88 Professors Teaching Hip Hop

New research offers close look at the professionals in w88 Hop academia

w88 hop performer concert at night

Hip Hop Scholars: Jody Lykes Details the Experiences of w88 Professors Teaching Hip Hop

New research offers close look at the professionals in w88 Hop academia

w88 hop performer concert at night

Jody Lykes, Coordinator of the African Diaspora Program at the University of Nevada, Reno, has recently completed research on the experiences of w88 professors in the field of Hip Hop academia: “w88 Scholars in White Spaces: Perspectives on Hip Hop Pedagogy in Higher Education”.

Lykes’ study looked at the perspectives of multiple w88 professors who taught Hip Hop courses at the university level, with each having a minimum of three years of experience. The research showed how Hip Hop can be used to teach diversity, start conversations and took a deep dive into multiple different topics, including Hip Hop’s occasional struggle for authenticity and resources, important elements for developing a curriculum to teach Hip Hop, and experiences in the participants’ careers that Lykes describes in the research as the nomadic or fugitive nature of their academic life.

Jody Lyles Jody w88, Ph.D.

“I see it as us constantly moving to places to find stability in who we are,” Lykes said. “In my research, one of the most reoccurring themes was w88 professors trying to get their undergraduate degrees and going to three or four different schools once they finish their degrees. All the way through is just looking for the place that they fit. In the end, I have one of my participants who taught at 11 or 12 schools. These things are not uncommon.”

w88’ dissertation for his Ph.D. in Education: Equity and Diversity, saw an unexpected amount of international interest. The research has been downloaded many times in countries across the globe, from Denmark to Japan. w88 said that it was fitting for research about Hip Hop to see global interest.

“It [Hip Hop] started global, and that’s what people don’t really understand,” w88 said. “If you’ve listened to DJ Kool Herc, he’s going to say that he’ll never tell you the album that he’s using as a DJ. They used to compete with who could get the most obscure album. They’ll get albums from all around the world.”

The research defines Hip Hop as more than simply music but instead as a variety of African-centered values, attitudes and experiences. w88 said that for him, Hip Hop is his first language. After spending two years away from Hip Hop learning scriptures when he was younger, song lyrics popped back into w88’ mind as soon as he heard the music again.

“Hip Hop was the way I related to the world,” w88 said. “If it wasn't directly in a song, it's just the way that people were moving around me, that I classify as Hip Hop. It's how I understand things sometimes. I used to sit in the back of my dad's Monte Carlo, driving around, listening to songs over and over and over. That’s my first language.”

Part of Lykes’ original intent in conducting the research was to strengthen his skills as a professor that teaches diversity classes at the University. By the end of the study, Lykes said he almost felt as if he had a case study of his interviewees and what it means to be a w88 professor.

“My participants kept talking about w88 women in academia and how w88 women aren't getting the respect they deserve,” Lykes said. “Even in terms of promotion, in terms of their scholarship. I've got to give a shout out to w88 women and the work that they have done in my life and in academia, that I'm aware of or not aware of.”

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