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Kahente Horn-Miller; Candace Brunette-Debassige; Sara Mai Chitty – Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2025
Calls to Indigenize the curriculum have been occurring and, indeed, increasing across Canadian universities since the release in 2015 of the calls to action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC, 2015). The present article documents the emergence at two universities of a support program for Indigenous curriculum, in the form of digital…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, College Curriculum, Canada Natives
Ruth Heilbronn – Ethics and Education, 2025
What does decolonising the curriculum (DtC) entail and is it possible in the current context? I distinguish between a thick and thin idea of DtC. Thick DtC acknowledges that alternative knowledge systems exist, other than our western view of knowledge as 'justified true belief'. Thick DtC calls for recognition of epistemic injustice to indigenous…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Curriculum Development, Indigenous Populations, Cultural Awareness
Seb Dianati; Reuben Bolt – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2025
In this paper we document the various strategies universities have undertaken or are currently undertaking in their Indigenising practices across the Australian higher education sector by screening university websites for their strategies, principles and initiatives. It serves as a vital stocktake, audited in November 2023, for institutions aiming…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Curriculum Development, Web Sites
Diego Román; Daniel Masaquiza; Katherine Ward; Luis Gonzalez-Quizhpe – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
Latin American countries have experienced demographic and linguistic changes since Educación Intercultural Bilingüe (EIB) was first developed. Yet, ministries of education continue to impose generic models that do not reflect the realities of migrant Indigenous groups, who experience linguistic and ethnic minoritisation processes. Based on our…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, American Indians, Bilingual Education
Simon Perris – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2025
This article addresses the application of matauranga Maori (Maori knowledge) to Classical Studies in light of the NCEA Change Programme (and the 2023 coalition government's changes to that programme). I focus on the (now-dormant) first 'Big Idea', which originally proposed that some classical terms or concepts might be optimally explained through…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Pacific Islanders, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Influences
Aslam Fataar – Transformation in Higher Education, 2025
This article calls for a fundamental reconstitution of the South African university curriculum through a contrapuntal lens that centres epistemic justice. Drawing on Edward Said's concepts of worldliness and contrapuntal reading, it argues that dominant knowledge systems must be brought into critical and sustained dialogue with the subjugated…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, College Curriculum, Curriculum Development
Maura C. Flannery – American Biology Teacher, 2024
Herbaria, collections of preserved plant specimens, have existed for 500 years as repositories of information about plants. Many of these collections are now being digitized, making them available to a much broader audience including students and teachers. Specimens can be used in a variety of different contexts in teaching biology, including from…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Science History, Biology, Science Instruction
Robin A. Bellingham – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
The continued erasure of place and politics from modernity's education systems and disciplinary knowledges perpetuates racialised and ecological injustices and extractive relations. In this paper I affirm the necessity of using evolving methods of critical place inquiry and relocalisation in higher education to redress these erasures. I illustrate…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Decolonization, Indigenous Knowledge
Oscar Koopman; Karen J. Koopman; Wally Lumadi; Samuel Amponsah – Palgrave Macmillan, 2025
This book examines post-colonial curriculum transformation across seven African nations. These are South Africa, Egypt, Cameroon, Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Namibia, and Ghana. It investigates whether these educational systems have truly decolonized their curricula or still remain rooted in Western frameworks despite achieving political independence.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Curriculum Development, Postcolonialism, Decolonization
Koopman, Oscar; Koopman, Karen J. – Palgrave Macmillan, 2023
This book offers an important contribution to the field of curriculum studies and higher education by examining the impacts of colonialism and neoliberalism in the South African education system and addressing ways to decolonise curriculum and teaching. Drawing on Pinar's work in curricular theory, the authors call for integrating self-reflective…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Decolonization, Colonialism, Neoliberalism
Yonah Hisbon Matemba – Religious Education, 2024
This paper initiates a novel discourse advocating for the anti-colonization of religious education (RE) in Africa South of the Sahara (ASoS). It illustrates how anti-colonial critiques can not only offer more precise theoretical perspectives but also generate a practical imperative for a paradigm shift in a school subject "still"…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Colonialism, Power Structure, African Culture
Georgakis, Steve – Physical Educator, 2023
Indigenous games and sports (IG&S) form a mandated part of the Health and Physical Education (HPE) learning area of the Australian National Curriculum and to encourage the adoption of IG&S, the Australian Curriculum, Assessment, and Reporting Authority (ACARA), the independent statutory authority responsible for the development of a…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Games, Athletics, Health Education
Terry Locke – Cultural Studies and Transdisciplinarity in Education, 2023
Chapter 7 is entitled "The problematics of representing sense of place". As indicated earlier, this book adopts a critically discursive framework. In terms of such a framework, "representation refers to the language used in a text or talk to assign meaning to groups and their social practices, to events, and to social and ecological…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Discourse Analysis, Ideology, Place Based Education
Kelly, Stephen; Rigney, Lester-Irabinna – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
Colonial settler societies' differing concepts and experiences of time entangle in enactments of curriculum knowledge and the governing of human subjects. This article examines how an Anglo-Eurocentric historical representation of time is used as a principle of reason to establish the conditions of epistemic progress through the curriculum and…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Land Settlement
Burns, Edgar A.; Andrews, Julie; James, Claire – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
Bourdieu's concept of habitus clivé illuminates Indigenous Australians' experiences in tertiary environments for both Aboriginal students and Aboriginal staff. Habitus formed through family, schooling and social class is also shaped by urban, regional or rural upbringing, creating a durable sense of self. Aboriginal people in Australia live in all…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Higher Education, Educational Experience

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