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Showing 1 to 15 of 20 results Save | Export
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Edith H. van der Boom – International Journal of Christianity & Education, 2024
With the goal of working towards decolonizing educational practices, this article considers the Indigenous medicine wheel as inspiration for a cyclical model for learning and assessment. Many current assessment practices highlight individual achievement rather than ongoing and relational learning. This article suggests using a "Learning…
Descriptors: Christianity, Religious Education, Religious Factors, Medicine
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David E. K. Smith – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2025
I examine the educational properties of Iñupiaq songs and dances showing how they convey critical cultural knowledge, practical skills, and teach the value system of the Iñupiaq people. The practice of Alaska Native dance, a fundamental pedagogical strategy, was limited for 100 years by oppressive colonial forces. Framed in revitalization efforts,…
Descriptors: Cultural Activities, Alaska Natives, Singing, Dance
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Roberts, Carolyn – Papers on Postsecondary Learning and Teaching, 2023
Looking back and learning from Indigenous knowledges in education holds the key to supporting change in educational spaces today to be more inclusive and wholistic. Indigenous practices, passed down from generation to generation, hold important knowledge that can be used in classroom teaching. My hope is that by using this Indigenous lens of…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Educational Change, Colonialism
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St John, Nicola; Edwards-Vandenhoek, Samantha – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2022
Euro-Western perspectives dominate visual communication design education in Australia. This paper examines how the "8 Aboriginal Ways of Learning" pedagogical framework transformed the learning and teaching of design within high school contexts in two Aboriginal communities -- Ntaria in the Northern Territory and Warmun in Western…
Descriptors: Design, Indigenous Populations, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
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Beasy, Kim; Hunter, Mary Ann; Hicks, David; Pullen, Darren; Brett, Peter; Thomas, Damon; Reaburn, Robyn; Baker, William; Fan, Frances; Cruickshank, Vaughan; Stephenson, Elspeth; Hatisaru, Vesife – Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2021
In this essay, as a group of teacher educators, we discuss our experience of "walking the walk" of teacher education transformation at a time of urgent change. We reflect upon our process of integrating three key priorities in our preservice teacher education courses: education for sustainability; trauma-informed practice; and…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Educational Change, Sustainability, Trauma
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Hannes Kalisch – FIRE: Forum for International Research in Education, 2023
This article presents a new perspective on how to think about interculturality and education from the perspective of a native society in the Paraguayan Chaco. It highlights how formal schooling reaffirms the model of unidirectional relations advocated by national society. Within this model, indigenous peoples and persons are not allowed to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Latin Americans, Indigenous Populations, Inclusion
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Rival, Laura – Oxford Review of Education, 2023
In contribution to a body of scholarship that examines teaching as a form of learning, the paper addresses a central question: What can be learnt from organised mobilisation to educate in communities eager to strengthen their unique biocultural heritage? The question is explored through an examination of two grassroots education projects in Latin…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Ethnography, International Organizations, Teaching Methods
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Aikman, Sheila – Studies in the Education of Adults, 2019
Drawing on long term ethnographic research in the SE Peruvian Amazon this article asks what kinds and forms of learning do indigenous women value, how are the knowledge and skills they value changing over time and what is the nature of their agency in the face of the discrimination and prejudice that permeate their lives. Harakmbut women's lives…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Females
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Harrison, Neil – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
Many great cultures of the world have recognised the impossibility of teaching. Governments in various colonial countries continue to spend huge sums of money on 'closing the gap' in Indigenous education, yet national assessment figures would support the claim that teaching is indeed an impossibility. This paper draws on some of Biesta's recent…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Human Body, Indigenous Populations, Self Motivation
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Elliott-Groves, Emma; Meixi – Journal for the Study of Education and Development, 2022
Indigenous Knowledge Systems and their underlying ethical qualities guide social interaction and the process by which Indigenous children learn what it means to be a person within family and community life. Using the Learning by Observing and Pitching In (LOPI) framework as a starting point, this paper explores a case study of a death in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Ethics
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Thomsen, Patrick; Leenen-Young, Marcia; Naepi, Sereana; Müller, Karamia; Manuela, Sam; Sisifa, Sisikula; Baice, Tim – Higher Education Research and Development, 2021
Limited attention has been paid to the experiences of Pacific Early Career Academics (PECA) in utilising their culture-specific systems of knowledge in their pedagogical practice. As a cross-section of PECA employed in a variety of disciplines and faculties, we explore how our Pacific identities infuse our pedagogical approaches in a way that…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teaching Methods, Pacific Islanders, Beginning Teachers
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Meixi; Kongkaew, Sukanda; Theechumpa, Panthiwa; Pinwanna, Amornrat; Ling, Alison – Comparative Education Review, 2022
We write this article as educators working at Sahasatsuksa school, an urban Indigenous school in Thailand, who also maintain ties with related Redes de Tutoría work in Mexico. This article engages the stories of our trans-Indigenous teacher collective to illustrate how poetic ways of making relatives across time advanced our intellectual, ethical,…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Ethics
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Nxumalo, Fikile; Villanueva, Marleen – International Journal of Early Childhood Environmental Education, 2019
This article is situated within ongoing efforts in early childhood education to unsettle extractive relations with the more-than-human world and efforts to situate children's learning within current conditions of environmental vulnerability. The authors discuss some pedagogical and curricular interruptions that emerged from foregrounding…
Descriptors: Water, Early Childhood Education, Indigenous Knowledge, Kindergarten
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Carozzi, Giulia – Educational Action Research, 2023
For Foucault, discourses shape people's knowledge and inform how they act in a society. Power over others is legitimated by dominant discourses, a means through which hegemony discloses itself: a given group is entitled to oppress another. As a parent-educator based in Italy, I see such discourses manifesting themselves in actions and speeches. As…
Descriptors: Action Research, Educational Theories, Power Structure, Western Civilization
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Lin, Jing; Hiltebrand, Genevieve; Stoltz, Angela; Rappeport, Annie – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2021
This article focuses on the relationships between social justice, environmental justice, and sustainability from the local to global levels. We envision social and environmental justice as involving not only human beings, but also the rights of all species to life and respect. We advocate an ecological justice approach based on the equality and…
Descriptors: Correlation, Social Justice, Indigenous Knowledge, Environmental Education
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