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Sara Tolbert; Bronwen Cowie; Rose Hipkins; Pauline Waiti – Research in Science Education, 2025
In this article, we revisit the contentious history of personification to explore its potential for shifting the aesthetics of science education. We argue that personification can act as a boundary object to open up new aesthetic possibilities for science and education, toward an aesthetics of personhood. Drawing on philosophy, Indigenous…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Science Education, Aesthetics, Indigenous Knowledge
Peter Cole – in education, 2024
There is an urgency for compelling new narratives of ecological survival that draw on Indigenous and 'othered' millennial intelligences and agencies. With a focus on the lifegivingness and sacredness of water, this paper is a call for collective inter-cultural cross-species oral-performative, recuperative conversations for re-learning to care for…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Music, Religious Factors, Water
Melanie Nind; Sadhbh O'Dwyer; Marta Cristina Azaola – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2025
This article explores the use of the circle as a shape metaphor in qualitative and education research and particularly in research designs. Circles dominate the shape metaphors found in the literature and the paper argues that this is because circles have key features that align well with designing and conducting qualitative research. Circles…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Educational Research, Cooperation, Communities of Practice
Sarah Urquhart – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
Ecologically, lichen plays a significant role in the formation of flourishing ecosystems by breaking apart rock formations using small fungal threads to form fertile soil which supports a growing complexity/diversity of life. This essay uses lichen as a metaphor to describe fossilized constructs (colonial epistemologies and ontologies,…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Biological Sciences, Ecology, Biodiversity
Beeman, Chris; Blenkinsop, Sean – Journal of Environmental Education, 2021
In this paper, Cassandra's role in the ancient Greek myth of the fall of Troy, as one given the gift of prophesy but cursed to be disbelieved, is explored with a view to understanding the apparently powerless position of climate justice and environmental activism to change public policy. To make this case, we re-interpret the myth of Cassandra to…
Descriptors: Climate, Sustainability, Environmental Education, Activism
Isaacs, Devon S. – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Native American students in higher education are often asked to find a sense of belonging in places and spaces that do not reflect their cultures or worldviews. This can lead to isolation and a feeling of having to choose between themselves and their identities as Indigenous peoples. This contributes to poorer mental health, loss of well-being,…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, College Students, Sense of Community, Indigenous Knowledge
Lagi, Rosiana; Waqailiti, Ledua; Raisele, Kolaia; Tyson, Lorena Sanchez; Nussey, Charlotte – Comparative Education, 2023
This paper takes inspiration from the Indigenous Fijian practice of 'curui' -- weaving or patching together -- as a metaphor to explore connections between climate justice, gender equality, and education in Fijian policies and practices. The paper argues that neither gender equality nor education can be 'silver bullets' for the huge challenges…
Descriptors: Climate, Sex Fairness, Indigenous Knowledge, Foreign Countries
Ng, Wendy; Ayayqwayaksheelth, J'net; Chu, Sarah – Journal of Museum Education, 2022
In this article, the tree is used as a metaphor for the birth, nourishment, growth, stress, pruning, resilience, and regeneration of decolonial work to indigenize museum education. At the center of this work is Indigenous peoples, perspectives, and ways of knowing and being. This principle has guided the work of the authors who assert that when…
Descriptors: Museums, American Indians, Figurative Language, Females
Naufahu, Mefileisenita; Havea, 'Elisapesi H.; Kaufononga, Sangata A. F.; Laulaupea'alu, Siuta – Waikato Journal of Education, 2021
Given the current impact of COVID-19, the learning experiences of Pasifika students within tertiary education has implicated their social and emotional wellbeing. Engaging in a Tongan learning approach, such as "fakalukuluku," can present a viable learning practice for tertiary students' learning experiences. This paper presents the…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Pacific Islanders, Culturally Relevant Education, College Students
Rodríguez, Briana K. N.; Kokka, Kari – Educational Foundations, 2021
Relationships, such as the advisee/advisor relationship, in academia are typically taught to be used as a resource (a commodity) for the advancement of one's career. Problematizing the advising relationship draws attention to the inherent hierarchies and violence an advisor may perpetuate. In this article, we explore our resistance and healing…
Descriptors: Academic Advising, Faculty Advisers, Teacher Student Relationship, Racial Bias
Garcia, Angel A., Jr. – ProQuest LLC, 2018
Ethnogeology is the scientific study of human relationships with the Earth as a system, typically conducted within the context of a specific culture. Indigenous or historically resident people may perceive local places differently from outside observers trained in the Western tradition. Ethnogeologic knowledge includes traditional indigenous…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Geology, Ethnography
Kabini Sanga; Seu'ula Johansson-Fua; Martyn Reynolds; David Fa'avae; Richard Robyns; Grace Rohoana; Graham Hiele; Danny Jim; Lorreta Joseph Case; Demetria Malachi – International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives, 2022
This article takes a relational approach to Pacific leadership by presenting three layers of discussion. First, we provide findings from our research team members about the relationships between the Pacific community and school leaders' understandings of leadership. We include accounts of how leaders negotiate in context between forms of…
Descriptors: Pacific Islanders, Instructional Leadership, Leadership Role, Administrator Attitudes
Lowan-Trudeau, Gregory – Journal of Environmental Education, 2019
In this article, I autoethnographically consider my experiences as a Métis scholar of mixed Indigenous and European ancestry based in Canada as an entry point for exploration of critical, interpretive, Indigenous and other traditional and contemporary research paradigms relevant to the field of Indigenous environmental education. Foundational…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Ethnography, American Indians, College Faculty
Kupferman, David W. – Policy Futures in Education, 2018
This paper considers the ways in which the words "school" and "education" are conflated in the social imaginary, and what the effects of this conflation in meaning and purpose are both theoretically and in practice. It is not difficult to see the ways in which these two terms are used almost synonymously, and uncritically. Yet…
Descriptors: Schools, Education, Language Usage, Figurative Language
Jackson-Barrett, Elizabeth M.; Lee-Hammon, Libby – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2019
In this paper, we present findings from an eighteen-month research project conducted in a remote community school in Western Australia. The data from this project includes documentation pertaining to the practices of educators engaging with Aboriginal Elders and children on Country. The aim of the project was to document the transformative…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Rural Areas, Indigenous Populations, Longitudinal Studies

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