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San Pedro, Timothy – Teachers College Press, 2021
"Protecting the Promise" is the first book in the "Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies Series" edited by Django Paris. It features a collection of short stories told in collaboration with five Native families that speaks to the everyday aspects of Indigenous educational resurgence rooted in the intergenerational learning that…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Culturally Relevant Education, American Indians, American Indian Education
Hiha, Anne Aroha – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2016
Kaupapa Maori is thoroughly theorised in academia in Aotearoa and those wishing to use it as their research methodology can find support through the writing of a number of Maori academics. What is not so well articulated, is the experiential voice of those who have used Kaupapa Maori as research methodology. My identity as a Maori woman…
Descriptors: Ethnic Groups, Pacific Islanders, Research Methodology, Indigenous Populations
Cisneros, Nora Alba – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2018
In this article, the author presents an Indigenous Epistolary Methodology (IEM) to reflect on what it means for Indigenous women to engage the notion of refusal in traditional writing methods and qualitative research. The author proposes that an IEM, nestled within her familial genealogies, Indigenous Knowledges and Chicana Feminist Epistemology…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Resistance (Psychology), Womens Studies, Mothers
Somerville, Margaret Jean – Australian Educational Researcher, 2018
This lecture asks: How can education research address the big questions of our time, and what has politics got to do with it? It will trace moments and movements of researcher-(un)becoming to explore the (micro)politics of a lifetime of educational research. Politics is understood as both intimate and immense, as the intertwined politics of global…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Relevance (Education), Educational Researchers, Foreign Countries
Naufahu, Mefi – Waikato Journal of Education, 2018
A number of researchers have done extensive work on ontologies, epistemologies and pedagogies in relation to Pasifika research, but little on methodologies. Vaioleti describes talanoa as a phenomenological research approach which is ecological, oral and interactive. Halapua's article Talanoa Process: The Case of Fiji (2008) emphasises talanoa as a…
Descriptors: Pacific Islanders, Research Methodology, Indigenous Knowledge, Oral Tradition
Oldehaver, Jacinta Lucia – Waikato Journal of Education, 2018
Dialogic approaches are promising vehicles for effective pedagogy, providing opportunities for students to talk about learning; build on and sustain individual and collective identities, and; advance thinking and understanding in ways that support enhanced achievement. Whilst this is an idealised view of talk in classrooms, international…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Culturally Relevant Education, Classroom Communication, Pacific Islanders
Peacock, John – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2018
When Vernon Lambert and Lorraine Greybear graduated from the Fort Totten, North Dakota, Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) community school in 1957 and 1959, respectively, Dakota language and culture were not even taught. Lambert's mother had stopped speaking Dakota to him at home so he wouldn't have to learn English the hard way at school as she had.…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, Indigenous Knowledge, American Indian Languages, Tribally Controlled Education
Ambrosio, John – Democracy & Education, 2018
This article is a response to a qualitative study that examined how the indigenous African notion of "ubuntu" informs how some school teachers in a Black township in South Africa conceptualize Western-oriented narratives of democracy. While the study acknowledges important differences in how ubuntu is understood and defined, the author…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Democracy
Baptista, Geilsa Costa Santos – Science Education International, 2018
This article aims to discuss the purpose of ethnobiology in biology teachers' training based on conceptions of biology teachers before and after their participation in a training course for science teachers that involved ethnobiology. The research was developed in 2009 and involved semi-structured interviews with nine biology teachers of public…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Biology, Science Education, Science Teachers
Maxwell, Jacinta; Lowe, Kevin; Salter, Peta – Australian Educational Researcher, 2018
This paper focuses on the 'problem' of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander education represented in the Australian Curriculum's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander histories and cultures cross-curriculum priority. Looking beyond particular curriculum content, we uncover the policy discourses that construct (and reconstruct) the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Pacific Islanders, Foreign Countries, History
Nxumalo, Fikile; Vintimilla, Cristina D.; Nelson, Narda – Curriculum Inquiry, 2018
In this article, the authors critically and generatively encounter emergent curriculum, drawing from their experiences working as pedagogistas in three different early childhood education centres in Western Canada. The intent is to engage with the concept of emergence as that which can bring ethical and political engagements with curriculum and…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Curriculum Design, Foreign Countries, Curriculum
Parra, Aldo; Trinick, Tony – Mathematics Education Research Journal, 2018
An investigation into an aspect of indigenous education provides the opportunity to forefront an epistemological discussion about mathematical knowledge. This paper analyses indigenous peoples' educational experiences in Colombia and Aotearoa/New Zealand of mathematics education, focusing on, among other things, sociolinguistic issues such as…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Mathematics Education, Sociolinguistics
Ndimande, Bekisizwe S. – Journal of Literacy Research, 2018
For many years, research epistemologies and methodologies have been influenced by colonial perspectives in knowledge production. The focus of this article is to discuss ways in which research can be transformed for the purpose of including marginalized communities, such as Indigenous communities, whose knowledge has been systematically excluded in…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Educational Research, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations
Heaton, Sharyn – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2018
Within the New Zealand curriculum, hauora has been co-opted as an underlying and interdependent concept at the heart of the learning area of health and physical education. Hauora is identified as a Maori philosophy of well-being, advocating a Maori world view of hauora. Contemporary understandings of hauora as a Maori philosophy of health are…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Pacific Islanders, Cultural Influences, Health Education
Stewart, Alistair James – Journal of Environmental Education, 2018
This article enacts Deleuze and Guattari's (1987) concept "assemblage" to craft a riverScape pedagogy that is informed by, and responsive to, the Murray Cod, the river, and its circumstances. The Murray Cod, the largest fish species in Australia's Murray-Darling Basin, has diverse cultural meanings. Cod are at once a creation being of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Natural Resources, Water, Earth Science

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