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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
Eric B. Claravall, Editor; Jessica Ferreras-Stone, Editor – IAP - Information Age Publishing, Inc., 2025
Throughout history, silences have been an inherent process of historical production -- privileged narratives masquerade as definitive history, and those deemed less worthy are mute (Trouillot, 1995). Because of this, our understanding of many events in the past is incomplete; and the way we frame our contemporary societies based on these events…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Historical Interpretation, Heritage Education, Humanities Instruction
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Street, C.; Robertson, K.; Smith, J.; Guenther, J.; Larkin, S.; Motlap, S.; Ludwig, W.; Woodroffe, T.; Gillan, K.; Ober, R.; Shannon, V.; Maypilama, E. – Critical Studies in Education, 2023
Policy analysis can be useful for learning about 'what works' in policy. Contemporary policy studies literature highlight that such learning is influenced by power relations in government that shape our ways of knowing the world. This paper offers a critically reflexive narrative account of power relations present during Indigenous higher…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Geographic Regions, Educational Policy, Policy Analysis
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Jodie Hunter; Tanya Samu; Fuapepe Rimoni – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2024
In many countries including Aotearoa New Zealand, rapidly changing population demographics have led to increasing cultural diversity in classrooms. Developing equitable outcomes for diverse learners including those from indigenous and migrant heritage requires educators to both respect cultural diversity and enact intercultural understanding and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Instructional Innovation, Teacher Characteristics, Teaching Methods
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Westbrook, Fiona; White, Jayne – Policy Futures in Education, 2021
Early childhood scholars in New Zealand have long lamented a rising dominance of neoliberalism. Correspondingly they suggest that there has been a lessening of socialist ideals and principles of Te Ao Maori after years of a right-wing government. With the 'refresh' of New Zealand's national early childhood curriculum, "Te Whariki" under…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Neoliberalism, Preschool Curriculum
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Pasha, Aamna – International Journal of Development Education and Global Learning, 2023
Global education is a broad field associated with educational traditions rooted in the objective of preparing learners to engage with a complex and interdependent world, and to respond to the needs of the planet. This article explores existing pedagogical approaches to argue for the need, in non-Western contexts, to make greater connections with…
Descriptors: Global Education, Teaching Methods, Non Western Civilization, Climate
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Renganathan, Sumathi – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2022
Research findings are necessary to inform, develop, and implement policies and strategies for positive outcome in education for Indigenous communities. This article analyses research publications concerning education for the Indigenous Orang Asli community in Malaysia. By analyzing the problems represented in the research papers, this article…
Descriptors: Research Problems, Indigenous Populations, Cultural Differences, Educational Research
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Kim, Eun-Ji Amy; Layman, Eric W. – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2022
The urban/rural dichotomy used in framing Indigenous educational issues is becoming increasingly untenable and deserving of scrutiny. Indigenous urban education follows initiatives derived from rural areas with the assumption that rural Indigenous education programs are pure or authentic. Without a critical examination of power relations, the flow…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Urban Education, Rural Urban Differences, Indigenous Knowledge
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Clifford, Valerie; Montgomery, Catherine – Higher Education Research and Development, 2017
In this article, differing interpretations of the internationalisation of higher education curriculum are explored analysing the structural and cultural aspects of the curriculum. Voices of tertiary staff from around the world taking part in a four-week, fully online course, entitled "Internationalising the curriculum for all students"…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Global Approach, Higher Education, Citizenship Education
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Smith, Jill; Pohio, Lesley; Hoeberigs, Robert – Multicultural Education Review, 2018
In 2015, cross-sector perspectives were sought on how teachers of visual arts in a sample of early childhood centres, primary schools and secondary schools in Auckland were responding to the increasing ethnic and cultural diversity of young people in New Zealand. The research was contextualised within national curricula, demographic statistics and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethnic Diversity, Cultural Differences, Visual Arts
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Tierney, Robert J. – Journal of Literacy Research, 2018
Drawing upon tenets of critical theory, cultural capital, global epistemologies, decolonization, Indigenous ways of knowing, mobility and translanguaging, ethics, and global citizenship, this article proposes a model of cross-cultural meaning making and worldly reading as a foundation for global epistemological eclecticism in our research and…
Descriptors: Critical Literacy, Cultural Capital, Epistemology, Ethics
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Samier, Eugenie – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2017
This article examines the increasing postcolonial and decolonising literature as it relates to non-Western countries and the history of their educational systems undergoing internationalisation and globalisation. The first section reviews a number of historiographical developments in the twentieth century that laid a foundation for a more cultural…
Descriptors: Educational Administration, Educational History, Non Western Civilization, Historiography
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Tan, Charlene; Chua, Catherine S. K. – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2015
Recent education reform in China reflects the global trend of education policy borrowing from Anglophone countries such as the USA. The reform in China essentially advocates shifting from knowledge reproduction and didacticism to knowledge construction by students through a learner-centredness approach. Aware of the trend of borrowing policy from…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Proverbs, Indigenous Knowledge, Foreign Countries
Cortina, Regina, Ed. – Multilingual Matters, 2014
This groundbreaking volume describes unprecedented changes in education across Latin America, resulting from the endorsement of Indigenous peoples' rights through the development of intercultural bilingual education. The chapters evaluate the ways in which cultural and language differences are being used to create national policies that affirm the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Educational Practices, Multicultural Education
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Barbara Wotherspoon – in education, 2011
Transformative educators such as Thomas Berry, Brian Swimme, and Edmund O'Sullivan believe that the time has come for a shift away from the dominant Western educational ideology that focuses on achievement, individualism, and material success. They propose that education must become more than a system of banking information and standardized…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Transformative Learning, Educational Change
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Kerwin, Dale Wayne – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2011
Aboriginal children learn a two-way pedagogy and most Aboriginal learners have to engage in bicultural and bilingual education to succeed in the dominant educational setting. Aboriginal Australians pride themselves on being Aboriginal, however Aboriginal epistemology and ontology are never considered as true methodologies within a dominant…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Minority Groups, Cultural Differences
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