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Tocker, Kimai – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2015
Kura kaupapa Maori provide a unique primary school education system that immerses children in Maori language and culture. Interviews with founding members from the first Auckland kura give a critical sense of the aspirations that guided them in their struggle to set up the kura kaupapa Maori initiative. The desire to provide suitable schooling for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethnic Groups, Pacific Islanders, Malayo Polynesian Languages
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Johnson, Lauri – Multicultural Education Review, 2014
Culturally responsive leadership, derived from the concept of culturally responsive pedagogy, incorporates those leadership philosophies, practices, and policies that create inclusive schooling environments for students and families from ethnically and culturally diverse backgrounds. In this essay I extend the tenets of culturally responsive…
Descriptors: Leadership Effectiveness, Cultural Relevance, Community Organizations, Community Programs
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Lee, Martha – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2014
This article describes a learning program of the Tohono O'odham or "desert people" of the Southwestern United States and Mexico. Their culture and knowledge on both sides of the border is for them a special way of life known as "himdag," where science is built into everyday life of gathering, hunting, farming, artistry, and…
Descriptors: Tribes, Indigenous Populations, American Indian Culture, Indigenous Knowledge
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James, Adrienne Brant; Lunday, Tammy – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2014
In traditional tribal cultures, children are treated with great respect and eagerly learn from their elders. But in contemporary Western society, Native students have the highest dropout rates and are subjected to disproportionate school disciplinary exclusion, which becomes a pipeline into the justice system (Sprague, Vincent, Tobin, & Pavel,…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, American Indian Culture, American Indian Students
Schonleber, Nanette S. – NAMTA Journal, 2014
Nanette Schonleber makes a remarkable correlation as to why Hawaiian indigenous educators thrive with Montessori pedagogy. Compatible educators share values and goals, such as developmental learning, respect for parenthood, freedom of movement and independence, choice in learning, and specific individualized potential. Hawaiian language and…
Descriptors: Hawaiians, Indigenous Knowledge, Culturally Relevant Education, Montessori Method
Bissell, Alexandra; Korteweg, Lisa – Canadian Journal of Education, 2016
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission's "Calls to Action" report (2015), in the section "Education for Reconciliation" (p. 7, #62-63), calls for the integration of Indigenous knowledge and teaching methods into the curriculum and for better preparation of teachers to deliver Indigenous content. Settler-teachers, however, have…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Indigenous Knowledge, Preservice Teacher Education, Teacher Education Programs
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Lowan, Greg – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2012
Indigenous environmental science education is a diverse, dynamic, and rapidly expanding field of research, theory, and practice. This article highlights, challenges, and expands upon key areas of discussion presented by Mack et al. (Cult Stud Sci Educ 7, "2012") as part of the forum on their article "Effective Practices for Creating…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Environmental Education, Foreign Countries, Science Education
Parkinson, Chloe – International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives, 2015
This paper examines the trial implementation of the Australian Curriculum in a remote Aboriginal school. It was a school that at the time was beginning to achieve successes with the development of dual-knowledge, transformational outcomes based curriculum that had its justification in the Northern Territory Curriculum Framework. Drawing on the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Rural Schools, Curriculum Implementation, Transformational Leadership
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Searing, Billie Margaret Jean; Graham, Fiona; Grainger, Rebecca – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2015
This study examined the perceived availability and helpfulness of supports used by caregivers of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder in New Zealand, particularly for caregivers who are Maori, and who live rurally. Caregivers (N = 92) completed the Family Support Scale with comparisons analysed using t tests. Free text comments were invited and…
Descriptors: Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Autism, Child Caregivers, Social Support Groups
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Ritchie, Stephen D.; Wabano, Mary Jo; Corbiere, Rita G.; Restoule, Brenda M.; Russell, Keith C.; Young, Nancy L. – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2015
Indigenous voices are largely silent in the outdoor education and adventure therapy literature. The purpose of this research collaboration was to understand how a 10-day outdoor adventure leadership experience (OALE) may promote resilience and well-being for Indigenous youth through their participation in the program. The process was examined…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Canada Natives, American Indian Reservations, Ethnography
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Guenther, John; Bat, Melodie; Osborne, Sam – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2013
When people talk about education of remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students, the language used is often replete with messages of failure and deficit, of disparity and problems. This language is reflected in statistics that on the surface seem unambiguous in their demonstration of poor outcomes for remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Rural Education, Indigenous Populations, Educationally Disadvantaged
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Logue, Jennifer – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2013
While there is a whole field devoted to the widely esteemed enterprise of epistemology, until fairly recently much less attention has been given to "agnotology," the study of ignorance. Epistemologists of ignorance use the concept agnotology to signify the study of the making and unmaking of ignorance, as well as the task of…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Knowledge Level, Philosophy, Politics
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Savage, Catherine; Macfarlane, Sonja; Macfarlane, Angus; Fickel, Letitia; Hemi, Hemi Te – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2014
This article presents the developmental stages of a nationwide whole-school strengths-based behavioural intervention by Maori and centring on Maori interests; an initiative that has the potential to transform educational success and opportunities. The initial phase involved a cycle of data collection. This was conducted via a series of focus…
Descriptors: Ethnic Groups, Pacific Islanders, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge
Goulet, Linda M.; Goulet, Keith N. – University of British Columbia Press, 2014
In recent decades, educators have been seeking ways to improve outcomes for Indigenous students. Yet most Indigenous education at the K-12 level still takes place within a theoretical framework based in Eurocentric thought. "In Teaching Each Other," Linda Goulet and Keith Goulet provide an alternative framework for teachers working with…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Culturally Relevant Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Cultural Influences
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Baxter, Lindy P.; Meyers, Noel M. – Australian Journal of Education, 2016
This research explores school attendance rates within the steadily growing population of Victorian urban Indigenous students and challenges for realising high attendance levels. Poverty, pervasive throughout the urban Indigenous community, presents circumstances where it once, and could still, erode regular school attendance. We report one…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Community Characteristics, School Community Relationship
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