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Frank Mensah Bonsu; Nicole Wragg; Sivanes Phillipson; Christopher Waller – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2025
In this paper, we explore the evolution of graphic design and its education in Ghana. Graphic design emerged in Ghana through colonisation, which influenced the perceptions of traditional art forms. We review the tensions between Western and indigenous trends in Ghanaian art and design and explore existing pedagogical philosophies in Ghana's…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Graphic Arts, Design, Indigenous Populations
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Froilán Cubillos Alfaro; Marcela Fernández Valenzuela; Francisco López Rojas; Carolina Meza Vásquez; Diego Pinto Veas – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
Western modernity has systematically made ancestral and indigenous knowledge invisible through their use of scientific logic, making school a space of hegemonic control through the western knowledge taught in the official curriculum. Despite that, in Chile advances in matters of constitutional recognition and cultural value are rare. Ten years…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Western Civilization, Curriculum
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Corey Whitt – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2024
In this article, I analyze the interaction between America's federal Indigenous policy and music education as a distinct policy tool of Indigenous assimilation, tracing the transition from the Allotment and Assimilation Era to the modern Era of Self-Determination. Throughout United States history, music education has served the policy interests of…
Descriptors: Music Education, Land Settlement, Indigenous Populations, American Indian Education
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Silvia Espinal-Meza – Australian and International Journal of Rural Education, 2024
Rural schools and communities in Peru are rich in cultural diversity in Indigenous languages and traditions, but rural areas remain the most disadvantaged regions. Peru's educational policies are neoliberal and have hindered opportunities for the rural population to receive a high quality education with a critical reappraisal of their cultural…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Diversity, Rural Areas, Rural Schools
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Nakagawa, Satoru – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2021
In this article I will first address what decolonisation is with specific reference to the colonisation and enslavement (Nelson, 2006) of Indigenous peoples, specifically my own people, the Indigenous Amami of the former Ryukyu Kingdom. According to Laenui (2006), there were five steps of colonisation, many of which I suggest are not yet complete.…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Social Systems, Western Civilization, Indigenous Populations
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Govender, Arushani – Education as Change, 2020
This article uses feminist perspectives on decoloniality as a lens for analysing selected poems from Francine Simon's début collection, Thungachi (2017). Simon is a South African Indian woman poet from Durban, raised by Catholic parents of Tamil linguistic heritage. Her poetry collection, while feminist and experimental, deeply captures the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge
Pierotti, Raymond; Wildcat, Daniel R. – Winds of Change, 1997
Presents evidence that Native peoples' profound understanding of ecology, the nature of individuality, and resulting differences in survival and reproduction led them to develop ideas of evolution through natural selection long before Europeans. Suggests that in order to survive, Native Americans must not allow Western ways of thought, which are…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indians, Christianity, Creationism