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Matthew C. Brower – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2025
This article proposes that incorporating Indigenous North American fundamental worldviews into social work education could offer valuable insights. Highlighting the perspectives of Native American fundamental worldviews, which emphasize interconnectedness and responsibility toward all living beings, could aid in decolonization efforts through…
Descriptors: Social Work, Inclusion, Indigenous Knowledge, World Views
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Kevin Lowe; Claire Golledge; Phillip Poulton; Katherine Thompson – Australian Educational Researcher, 2025
Education systems founded on the legacies and structures of colonisation (for example, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada) have established curricular structures that have perpetuated and entrenched processes and practices that marginalise and delegitimise Indigenous people and knowledge. We argue that the approach to curriculum inclusion used…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, Educational Policy, Deception
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J. Scott Goble; Anita Prest – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2025
Following on the Canadian federal government's belated establishment of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada in 2008 to address the abuse inflicted on Indigenous peoples through the residential school system and its legacy, the British Columbia (BC) Ministry of Education mandated in 2015 the embedding of local Indigenous knowledge…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Music Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Music
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Yemuna Sunny – Contemporary Education Dialogue, 2024
Researching with the Bharia in Central India was a rare opportunity as it is perhaps the only tribal community in the region who are not dispossessed from their habitat in Madhya Pradesh, the Indian province with the largest number of tribal people. Dominant debates rarely take cognisance of the perceptions of the tribal communities. The article…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Community, Tribes, Attitudes
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Locke, Michelle; Trudgett, Michelle; Page, Susan – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2023
Data from the "Developing Indigenous Early Career Researchers" (ECRs) project reported that efforts of Indigenous ECRs are often undermined by examples of micro-racism. Shared personal experiences revealed racist attitudes and assumptions held by some non-Indigenous academics. This draws critical attention to the fact that while many…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, World Views
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Catherine Hamm; Jeanne Marie Iorio; Jayson Cooper; Kylie Smith; Peter Crowcroft; Angela Molloy Murphy; Will Parnell; Nicola Yelland – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2025
In response to dominant discourses of quality and an over-reliance on humancentric practice, the "Learning with Place" framework emerges as an innovative way to rethink practices, structures, and policies within education and beyond. 'Learning with Place' views the local Place as agentic, recognising Place as inclusive of local First…
Descriptors: Place Based Education, World Views, Indigenous Knowledge, Story Telling
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Hannah Berning; Chris North; Susannah Stevens; TeHurinui Clarke – Journal of Outdoor and Environmental Education, 2024
At the heart of sustainability is the relationship between humans and the planet. The binary of anthropocentric or ecocentric worldviews appears to be powerful in defining this relationship. Sustainability requires nuanced approaches which go beyond simple binaries, and therefore a dialectic approach which works to synthesise the binaries may be…
Descriptors: Oral Tradition, Indigenous Knowledge, Sustainability, Ethnic Groups
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Ojeya Cruz Banks – Journal of Dance Education, 2023
Memoirs of studying with acclaimed dancer-choreographer Moustapha Bangoura in the Republic of Guinea, West Africa, illuminate the significant, yet unspoken role played by the "djembefola" (lead drummer) in teaching and learning dance. This portrait provides autobiographical and ethnographic insights, gained through attending "Le…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Dance Education, Indigenous Knowledge, Decolonization
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Dwayne Donald; Lesley Tait; Etienna Moostoos-Lafferty – Canadian Journal of Education, 2025
This article hinges on the conviction that the centuries-long dominance of colonial worldview has resulted in the creation of educational practices that perpetuate colonial forms of relationship denial in mostly subtle and unquestioned ways. As part of an ongoing effort to honour knowledge systems and ways of being that are not fully circumscribed…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Decolonization, Educational Practices, World Views
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Anne Poelina; Marlikka Perdrisat; Sandra Wooltorton; Edwin Lee Mulligan – Environmental Education Research, 2023
This paper explains Feeling and Hearing Country as an Australian Indigenous practice whereby water is life, Country is responsive, and Elders generate wisdom for a communicative order of things. The authors ask, as a society of Indigenous people and those no longer Indigenous to place, can we walk together in the task of collectively healing…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Research Methodology
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Meixi; Kalonji Nzinga – Review of Research in Education, 2023
This chapter is grounded in a closer examination of the multiple origins of our theories of learning. Two questions guide our inquiry. First, in what ways has the science of learning and development originated in the lifeways of our ancestors? And second, what are some Global South Side origins of our theories of learning? First, we use two river…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Educational History, World Views, Story Telling
Michael Kariwo, Editor; Chouaib El Bouhali, Editor – Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2025
This edited volume examines the decolonization of worldviews and ways of knowing in education and educational policy. It critically challenges the Western interpretation of epistemology and ontology, providing a platform for contributors to demonstrate how concepts of decolonization, knowledge and worldviews are understood, as well as the impact…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Epistemology, World Views, Educational Practices
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Horsthemke, Kai – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2021
In the literature on inclusion and inclusive education there is a frequent conflation of (1) inclusion of diverse people, or people in all their diversity, (2) inclusion of diverse worldviews, and (3) inclusion of diverse epistemologies. Only the first of these is plausible--and perhaps even morally and politically mandatory. Of course, more needs…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Diversity, World Views, Epistemology
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Meighan, Paul J. – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2021
There is a need to decolonize English in order to reframe our relationships with fellow beings and our environment. English can frame water or oil as infinite, uncountable nouns, a tree as an inanimate, unconscious being, traditional and respected territories as wasteland, and animals as wildlife. With the current climate crisis, we know that…
Descriptors: English, Language Usage, World Views, Foreign Policy
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Billman, Jennifer A.H. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2023
For over 30 years, calls have been issued for the western evaluation field to address implicit bias in its theory and practice. Although many in the field encourage evaluators to be culturally competent, ontological competence remains unaddressed. Grounded in an institutionalized distrust of non-western perspectives of reality and knowledge…
Descriptors: Program Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Indigenous Knowledge, Phenomenology
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