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Lane, Julia – Journal of Experiential Education, 2012
This paper suggests a model of embodied environmental education grounded in participant interviews, fieldwork, scholarly literature, and the author's own embodied relationship with the natural world. In this article, embodiment refers to a process that stems from Indigenous Knowledges and theatre. Although Indigenous Knowledges and theatre…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Theater Arts, Indigenous Knowledge, Role Playing
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Maganda, Dainess – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2016
Drawing from a sociocultural perspective of literacy, with the goal to promote the use of African Native Languages (ANL) in schools, I conducted a Participatory Action Research in one multilingual primary school community in North West Tanzania. For three weeks, 19 teachers, 19 parents and 119 6th grade students collaborated with each other in a…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Action Research, Participatory Research, African Languages
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Rubin, Beth C. – American Educational Research Journal, 2016
Over the past several decades, the implementation of democratic citizenship education has become a common prescription for the civic reconstruction of post-conflict societies. Across the globe, educational changes are seen as fundamental to the creation of peaceful, tolerant, and democratic civic identities, the key to "social reconstruction,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Citizenship Education, Conflict, Social Change
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Dublin, Robin; Sigman, Marilyn; Anderson, Andrea; Barnhardt, Ray; Topkok, Sean Asiqluq – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2014
We have developed the traditional science fair format into an ocean science fair model that promoted the integration of Western science and Alaska Native traditional knowledge in student projects focused on the ocean, aquatic environments, and climate change. The typical science fair judging criteria for the validity and presentation of the…
Descriptors: Science Fairs, Oceanography, Models, Student Projects
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Kasun, G. Sue – Ethnography and Education, 2014
Reframing immigrant families as transnationals, this article highlights transnational families' ways of knowing. This study is based on a three-year, multi-sited critical ethnographic set of case studies of four families in the USA and Mexico. Transnational families in this study demonstrated Nepantlera knowing, or liminal, bridge-building knowing…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Migrant Workers, Working Class, Immigrants
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Kim, Eun-Ji Amy – McGill Journal of Education, 2015
Motivated by the striking under-representation of Indigenous students in the field of science and technology, the Ontario Ministry of Education has attempted to integrate Aboriginal perspectives into their official curricula in hopes of making a more culturally relevant curriculum for Indigenous students. Using hermeneutic content analysis (HCA),…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Canada Natives, Culturally Relevant Education
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Mokuku, Tšepo; Taylor, Jim – Journal of Education for Sustainable Development, 2015
This article explores prospects for community-based water resources management in Tlokoeng Valley, in the northern district of Lesotho. A qualitative survey was conducted to establish the pre-knowledge of the valley community. This provided a basis for a community education programme on wetlands conservation. Fifteen focus group interviews (FGIs)…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Water Quality, Sustainability, Qualitative Research
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Matemba, Yonah H.; Lilemba, John Makala – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2015
Although Namibia has been independent for more than two decades (1990--2014), the school curriculum remains essentially Eurocentric despite rhetoric on educational reform. Similar to other African countries, Western ideological power continues to dominate postcolonial education, even though political power rests in the hands of African leaders.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Social Change, Educational Change
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Kulnieks, Andrejs; Longboat, Dan; Young, Kelly – in education, 2013
In this article, we conceptualize curricula through an EcoJustice Education (EJE) framework to educate teachers about Indigenous and environmental education. The primary tasks of EJE are to engage learners in a cultural analysis of the ecological crisis and in the identification of diverse cultural methods that can bring about eco-democratic…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Environmental Education, Social Justice, Cultural Awareness
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Preece, Julia – Perspectives in Education, 2013
This article argues that the South African research community could benefit by engaging in more collaborative partnerships within the African continent in relation to community engagement. This argument relates to literature in South Africa concerning an Africanised notion of service learning (SL) and community engagement (CE), university…
Descriptors: Partnerships in Education, Service Learning, Foreign Countries, Educational History
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Kaya, Hassan O.; Seleti, Yonah N. – International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives, 2013
The higher education system in Africa and South Africa in particular, is still too academic and distant from the developmental challenges of African local communities. The integration of African indigenous knowledge systems (AIKS) into the higher educational system could improve its relevance. This is due to the holistic, community-based nature…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Relevance (Education), Indigenous Knowledge
Restoule, Jean-Paul; Gruner, Sheila; Metatawabin, Edmund – Canadian Journal of Education, 2013
This paper details a research project dedicated to honouring Mushkegowuk Cree concepts of land, environment and life in Fort Albany First Nation. Community youth interviewed local Elders to produce an audio documentary about the relations of the people to their traditional territory. These interactions evolved into a 10-day river trip with youth,…
Descriptors: Canada Natives, Indigenous Knowledge, Intergenerational Programs, Physical Environment
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Steele, Jamie Simpson – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2013
In Hawai'i's elementary schools, May Day programs feature children adorned with flower leis, singing and dancing hula about Hawaiian culture and performing traditions from major ethnic groups who settled the islands. Using the lens of geopathology, this research questions how various groups of residents long for belonging and struggle for…
Descriptors: Hawaiians, Cultural Maintenance, Ethnic Groups, Elementary School Students
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George, June; Lewis, Theodore – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2011
This article focuses on education in developing countries in the context of globalization and with specific reference to the Caribbean. It examines the concept of globalization and related concepts and positions developing countries within this context. It explores the possibility of the creation of a third space where the local and the global can…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Developing Nations, Foreign Countries, Administrative Organization
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Gonye, Jairos; Moyo, Nathan – Research in Dance Education, 2015
This paper examines the teaching and learning of traditional dance at primary school level in Zimbabwe as a key aspect of postcolonial curriculum reimagination within the broader project of reclaiming a nation's heritage. The paper used the survey design to determine how a cohort of primary school teachers understood traditional dance and how they…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Dance Education, Primary Education, African Culture
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