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Sergio Fernando Juárez; C. Kyle Rudick – Communication Education, 2024
The history of higher education in the United States is deeply rooted in colonialism. The communication discipline and the field of communication, teaching, and learning find themselves unable to completely sever their ties to settler/colonialism, white supremacy, and other dehumanizing ideologies. As the authors navigate the complexities of…
Descriptors: Educational History, Higher Education, Decolonization, Communications
Bekalu Mulualem, Molla; Tamiru, Alemayehu Bishaw; Dagnaw Kelkay, Asrat – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2022
Ethiopia is one of the oldest countries in the World, with about 3,000-years of history. The country had its own traditional system of education before the introduction of modern or Western type of education in 1908. However, since the beginning of so called modern education in Ethiopia, the curriculum has been copied from western countries,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Curriculum, Indigenous Knowledge
Maia Hetaraka – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
There is much to celebrate about the liberal-progressive approach championed by New Zealand, which continues to be a prized feature of New Zealand education. Many liberal-progressive practices developed in New Zealand and contextualised for New Zealand students that sought to expand and enrich education were borrowed from Native Schools, Maori…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Ethnic Groups, Pacific Islanders, Progressive Education
Preeti – History of Education, 2022
Agricultural improvement was a vital aspect of the 'development scheme' of the British Government in India as agriculture was the most revenue-generating industry in Bihar. From the first Famine Commission Report of 1880, there was a set agenda to improve agriculture through education. This was to be achieved through importing western science and…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational History, Rural Areas, Power Structure
Peñaloza, Gonzalo; Robles-Piñeros, Jairo; Baptista, Geilsa Costa Santos – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2023
For a long time within the history of education, it has been assumed that science classrooms are homogeneous spaces, constituted with the prevailing conception that only scientific culture can be represented. At the same time, Latin America is characterized by being a region with enormous biological and cultural diversity, with an invaluable…
Descriptors: Science Education, Cultural Pluralism, Educational History, Educational Philosophy
Takayo Ogisu – Education in the Asia-Pacific Region: Issues, Concerns and Prospects, 2022
This book presents a sociocultural account of logic, or a pedagogy, that governs Cambodian education, from policy-making to classroom practices. In so doing, it seeks to not only provide an introduction to Cambodian education, but also to help readers understand the complexities involved in reforming educational practices by drawing on an…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Policy, Policy Formation, Teaching Methods
Robyn Ober – Australian and International Journal of Rural Education, 2024
In 2023, researchers from the Batchelor Institute worked with staff, students and families from the Nawarddeken Academy in West Arnhem Land, which offers bicultural, community-driven education. Together, they engaged in a series of yarning circles as interviews with staff, students and families. The focus of the study was on retention, attendance…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Biculturalism, Community Education, Teacher Attitudes
Edwards, Kirsten T.; Shahjahan, Riyad A. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
A concerted attempt to offer a temporal lens (the way we make sense of and relate to time changes) underlying decolonizing pedagogy and curriculum (DCP) remains absent. Drawing on student resistance as an entry point, we offer a temporal account of DCP by unearthing the entanglements between past, present, and future underlying DCP enactments. We…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Foreign Policy, Curriculum Development, Teaching Methods
Yang, Rui; Xie, Meng; Wen, Wen – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2019
Since the mid-nineteenth century, Chinese intellectuals turned to the West for truth. China's modern education system has since been built upon Western experience, with little space for China's vast indigenous intellectual traditions. Meanwhile, Chinese traditions remain omnipresent and ubiquitous in the society. Due to many fundamental…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Western Civilization, Asian Culture, Indigenous Knowledge
Guzmán Valenzuela, Carolina – Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
Since the colonial era, Latin American universities have been subjected to narratives about what it means to be a university. Drawing on the concept of coloniality, this paper examines curricular and teaching practices in higher education that aim to decolonise Latin American universities, a particular topic that has been under-investigated. By…
Descriptors: Universities, Educational Change, Multicultural Education, Socialization
O'Sullivan, Nan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2019
This research parallels Tongan academic Hufanga 'Okusitino Mahina's assertions in the 1994 Contemporary Pacific article Our Sea of Islands, that 'People are thought to walk forward into the past and walk backward into the future, both taking place in the present, where the past and the future are constantly mediated in the ever-transforming…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Pacific Islanders, Futures (of Society), Sustainability
Cassim, Fatima – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2020
This article introduces playful learning as part of the decolonising project at institutes of higher learning in South Africa with specific reference to the discipline of communication design. Not only does the article interrogate the content of design education, specifically design for development, but more specifically the way that design for…
Descriptors: Play, Learning Processes, Communications, Design
Mino, Takako; Heto, Prince Paa-Kwesi – Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies in Education, 2020
African traditional education and soka approaches to education share a common vision of human education, which is key to transforming the education crisis facing Africa. We make this case in four steps. First, we explore the history of education in Africa to illustrate the roots of the crisis. Second, we introduce soka approaches to education, its…
Descriptors: African Culture, Indigenous Knowledge, Educational Change, Educational History
Loewen, Patrick – BU Journal of Graduate Studies in Education, 2021
The impact of Residential Schools on Indigenous People has left a long-lasting crippling effect on the subsequent generations of Indigenous youth. The resultant intergenerational loss of identity and self-value has cost the Indigenous People and their communities immensely. Aboriginal People based their education system on the real world around…
Descriptors: Residential Schools, Place Based Education, Land Use, Self Concept
May, Helen – Global Education Review, 2022
Miss Isabel Little was a Scottish infant teacher who immigrated to New Zealand in 1912. She was described as a "Froebel trained Scot from Edinburgh" and known around Wellington education circles for her "modern methods". In contrast to known Froebelian pioneers, Miss Little's historical footprint is light but the few glimpses…
Descriptors: Educational History, Early Childhood Education, Strategic Planning, Foreign Countries
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