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McGovern, Seana M. – Comparative Education Review, 2000
Reviews four books that explain modern schooling's irrelevance for many indigenous communities and that represent indigenous knowledge practices with respect: "What Is Indigenous Knowledge? Voices from the Academy"; "Escaping Education: Living as Learning within Grassroots Cultures"; "Intercultural Education and Literacy: An Ethnographic Study of…
Descriptors: Book Reviews, Colonialism, Culturally Relevant Education, Elementary Secondary Education
Nicholson, Rob – Natural History, 2000
Created in 1552 as a gift for Spain's king, the Badianus Manuscript is a repository of Aztec traditional medicinal knowledge and contains the earliest surviving illustrations of New World plants. At the College of Santa Cruz (Mexico City) for Aztec nobility, an Aztec healer who became the college physician compiled plant descriptions and medicinal…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, Cultural Exchange, Foreign Countries
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Collins-Gearing, Brooke – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2006
Australian children's literature has a history of excluding Indigenous child readers and positioning non-Indigenous readers as the subject. Rather than portray such literature, particularly before the 1950s, as simply racist or stereotypical, I argue that it is important for teachers, of all students, to help readers understand how nationalist or…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Indigenous Populations, Misconceptions, Racial Attitudes
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Christie, Michael – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2006
Indigenous academic researchers are involved in Indigenist, interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary research, all of which present problems and opportunities for Indigenous knowledge traditions. "Transdisciplinary" research is different from "interdisciplinary" research because it moves beyond the disciplinarity of the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Interdisciplinary Approach, Researchers
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McKinley, Elizabeth – International Journal of Science Education, 2005
The international literature suggests the use of indigenous knowledge (IK) and traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) contexts in science education to provide motivation and self-esteem for indigenous students is widespread. However, the danger of alienating culture (as knowledge) from the language in which the worldview is embedded seems to have…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Education, Malayo Polynesian Languages, Indigenous Knowledge
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Dyer, Caroline; Choksi, Archana; Awasty, Vinita; Iyer, Uma; Moyade, Renu; Nigam, Neerja; Purohit, Neetu; Shah, Swati; Sheth, Swati – International Journal of Educational Development, 2004
The need to enhance the relevance and quality of pre- and in-service teacher education in India has long been recognised in official commentaries. Despite the structural innovation of District Institutes of Education and Training to enhance systemic responsiveness to local contexts, training messages mediated through DIETs are largely not having…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Faculty Development, Indigenous Knowledge, Inservice Teacher Education
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Grigorenko, Elena L.; Meier, Elisa; Lipka, Jerry; Mohatt, Gerald; Yanez, Evelyn; Sternberg, Robert J. – Learning & Individual Differences, 2004
We assessed the importance of academic and practical intelligence in rural and relatively urban Yup'ik Alaskan communities with respect to Yup'ik-valued traits rated by adults or peers in the adolescents' communities. A total of 261 adolescents participated in the study; of these adolescents, 145 were females and 116 were males, and they were from…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Community Characteristics, Adolescents, Intelligence
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Fitzgerald, Tanya – Management in Education, 2005
Indigenous communities remain concerned about research into their lives, their control over and participation in the research process and the public dissemination of knowledge. The relationship between researcher and participant and the product of this relationship has been traditionally cast as a dualism with one side being the less powerful,…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences, Foreign Countries, Ethics
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Gopinathan, S. – Improving Schools, 2006
While considerable attention is being paid to reforming education systems to prepare students for the challenges of globalization and a knowledge-based economy, teacher education models in the Asia Pacific remain insufficiently critiqued. There is an urgent need to rethink teacher education as, in spite of decades of investment and development,…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Teacher Education Curriculum, Indigenous Knowledge, Global Approach
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Higgs, P.; Higgs, L. G.; Venter, E. – South African Journal of Higher Education, 2003
The importance of innovation in higher education is recognised in South African educational discourse. The South African White Paper on Science and Technology, issued in September 1996 and entitled, "Preparing for the 21st Century", states that, "the White Paper is built upon the twin concepts of "innovation" and a…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Research and Development, Foreign Countries, Educational Innovation
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Gould, Kerin – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2006
Indigenous peoples' current relationship to community development has evolved in connection to their places, cultures, and histories. Along with this experience, their own worldviews have adapted and shaped some outstanding strategies for surviving and thriving. In the very best of these cases, the communities are able to heal old social…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Holistic Approach, Community Development, American Indians
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Thaman, Konai H. – Higher Education Policy, 2002
This article focuses on the need for universities as teaching and research organisations, to recognise and act upon a more culturally inclusive interpretation of "sustainable development" and "sustainability". It argues for the valuing of indigenous worldviews as a means of achieving a more holistic and interdisciplinary way of thinking about the…
Descriptors: Sustainable Development, Universities, Indigenous Knowledge, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Hoobler, Ellen – American Indian Quarterly, 2006
This article features the museums of Oaxaca, the place where the community museum movement in Mexico got started. Oaxaca has the largest Indigenous population in Mexico, with about 36.6% of the population over five years old, or about 1.027 million people, speaking an Indigenous language. Tourists spend large amounts on group or personalized tours…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Museums, Indigenous Populations, American Indians
Elliott, Alison, Ed. – Early Childhood Australia, 2007
"Every Child" is Australia's premier early childhood publication, aimed at anyone involved in the care and education of children from birth to eight years--in particular child care professionals, teachers, child care students and the parents of young children. Published quarterly, it contains informative and entertaining articles on such…
Descriptors: Biodiversity, Foreign Countries, Conservation (Environment), Ecology
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Witt, Norbert – Educational Research and Reviews, 2007
The statement in the title, what if Indigenous Knowledge contradicts accepted scientific findings (Fowler, 2000), is an expression of the dilemma people who research Indigenous Knowledge think they find themselves in when they are confronted with different interpretations of what it means to be human, or, as I may summarize it, with different…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Philosophy, Cultural Context, Indigenous Knowledge
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