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Showing 31 to 45 of 277 results Save | Export
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Antonia Mocatta; Ryan Stoker; Lisa McIntosh – New Review of Academic Librarianship, 2024
This paper examines the University of Sydney Library's development and piloting of a methodology to survey its Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultural collections, to enhance catalogue metadata and allow culturally sensitive material to be identified and protected. The research falls broadly within the interpretivist epistemology and draws…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Academic Libraries, Library Materials, Library Services
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Hossein Ghanbari – Journal of Comparative and International Higher Education, 2024
Assessments in education enables educators, curriculum designers, and program developers to evaluate the success of their programs. It also allows for assessing learners enrolled in the programs. Assessment frameworks emanate from a Western and positivistic stance and tend to disregard linguistic and cultural diversity from the mainstream European…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Curriculum Design, Culturally Relevant Education, Student Evaluation
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Ruth, Damian – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2020
This article contrasts specific aspects of indigenous world views and wisdom on the one hand with specific themes in capitalism, colonisation, corporate interests, technology and education, on the other and argues that there is a fundamental clash of values between them. There is no assumption of a homogenous indigenous wisdom and no claim is made…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Social Systems, World Views, Technology Uses in Education
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Paul J. Meighan – Modern Language Journal, 2025
Languages shape worldviews, inform teacher values and behaviors, and are not disconnected from local political, sociocultural, and ecological contexts. For Indigenous peoples, language, land, and culture are inseparable. In contrast, English carries a human-centered, colonial, imperialist, and assimilationist legacy that persists in language…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Multilingualism, Code Switching (Language), Colonialism
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van der Walt, Johannes; Oosthuizen, Izak – Perspectives in Education, 2021
The indigenous sub-Saharan African philosophy of "ubuntu" that comes down to the expression: "I am a human being because of being with other human beings", developed over centuries. This philosophy, embodying the notion of deep respect for all human beings, is rooted in a humane inclination towards kindness and sound…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Altruism, Human Dignity
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Ritchie, Jenny; Phillips, Louise Gwenneth – Educational Review, 2023
In this position paper we consider the significance of global climate activism by children and young people in the light of ongoing western adult-centric policies and educational practices that largely continue to exclude Indigenous perspectives. Reflecting on the implications of this hegemony in the face of the convergent crises of climate and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, World Views, Climate, Early Childhood Education
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Bascuñán, Daniela; Carroll, Shawna M.; Sinke, Mark; Restoule, Jean-Paul – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2023
Teachers in Canadian public school contexts are attempting to teach about Indigenous knowledges and epistemologies. Given the present state of asymmetrical Indigenous-settler relations, the complexity of this work requires a large breadth of consideration. Our study provides insight into the nuances of teaching Indigenous perspectives and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Public School Teachers, Teaching Methods, Indigenous Knowledge
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Rhonda Chung; Walcir Cardoso – Canadian Modern Language Review, 2025
Land dispossession is key to imperialism as it enables settlers to deterritorialize from their homelands and reterritorialize onto foreign lands, displacing Indigenous inhabitants. In Canada, this settler colonial process not only imposed English and French as dominant languages but also contributed to a broader desensitization to land among their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Language Teachers, Preservice Teachers
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Cláudio da Silva; Fátima Pereira; José Pedro Amorim – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2024
Indigenous knowledge is generally recognised as an inferior social experience in spaces of knowledge production. The educational issue that results from this process imposes barriers to the integration of these epistemologies in the school environment. This study presents a systematic review about the integration of indigenous knowledge in primary…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Integrated Curriculum, Barriers
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Faleolo, Ruth – Waikato Journal of Education, 2021
This paper is a consideration of how the method/methodology of "talanoa" and "va," can be used online by Pacific researchers to respond to the current pandemic's effect on the traditional face-to-face physical spaces used for knowledge-sharing. The following discussion examines and explores the two concepts: "talanoa"…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Pacific Islanders, Indigenous Knowledge, Cultural Influences
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Dentzau, Michael W. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2019
In their paper Ramos de Robles, Gariby-Chávez and Curiel-Ballesteros offer that indigenous traditional knowledge (IK) concerning edible wild plants in Mexico, part of the historic culture, is fading through successive generations. Furthermore, they argue that a return to this knowledge which proved valuable for many ancestors is desperately needed…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, World Views, Conflict, Science Education
Isaacs, Devon S. – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Native American students in higher education are often asked to find a sense of belonging in places and spaces that do not reflect their cultures or worldviews. This can lead to isolation and a feeling of having to choose between themselves and their identities as Indigenous peoples. This contributes to poorer mental health, loss of well-being,…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, College Students, Sense of Community, Indigenous Knowledge
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Matapo, Jacoba; Enari, Dion – Waikato Journal of Education, 2021
This article proposes a Samoan Indigenous philosophical position to reconceptualise the dialogic spaces of "talanoa"; particularly how "talanoa" is applied methodologically to research practice. "Talanoa" within New Zealand Pacific research scholarship is problematised, raising particular tensions of the universal and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Pacific Islanders, Cultural Influences
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Kruse, Marc; Tanchuk, Nicolas; Hamilton, Robert – Educational Theory, 2019
The Anishinaabe Seven Fires Creation Story can be read as a theory on which all human beings share a fundamental love of reflecting reality in what they think and do. In this article, Marc Kruse, Nicolas Tanchuk, and Robert Hamilton argue that this ethical theory is correct but that the colonial ideology taught in our schools can obscure our…
Descriptors: American Indians, Indigenous Knowledge, Mythology, Ethics
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Goodman, K. A. – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2021
Social and emotional learning (SEL) to support students' wellbeing is even more critical within schools dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic. This article establishes why New Zealand primary schools need strategies to support the emotional wellbeing of students and why a prescriptive approach is not appropriate for the bicultural and multicultural…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Schools, Social Emotional Learning, Well Being
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