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Urrieta, Luis, Jr. – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
This article explores how children and youth learned indigenous heritage "saberes" (knowings) through intent community participation in Nocutzepo, Mexico. The "familia" (family) and "comunidad" (community)-based saberes were valuable for skills acquisition, but most important for learning indigenous forms of…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, American Indians, Foreign Countries, Learning Processes
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Yang, Rui – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2013
Modern universities are uniquely European in origin and characteristics. With the diffusion of the European model into the university throughout the world, the heritage of colonialism and the fact that contemporary universities are Western institutions without much linkage to their indigenous intellectual traditions are the fundamental reasons for…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Cultural Context, Foreign Countries, Universities
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Odora Hoppers, Catherine A. – International Journal of Development Education and Global Learning, 2015
"In a time of unacceptable global injustice, growing inequalities in the distribution of power, accelerating climate change, and unwavering racism and social exclusion, we are today facing the biggest challenges of human history" (European Conference on Intercultural Dialogue in Development Education, 2008: 1). A favourable wind is…
Descriptors: Social Differences, Power Structure, Foreign Policy, Social Change
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Ratana-Ubol, Archanya; Henschke, John A. – International Journal of Adult Vocational Education and Technology, 2015
This article provides the background and concept of Thailand Lifelong Learning [LLL], even attempting a definition. The Thai LLL vision encompasses strategies for developing human qualities such as integrity, self-reliance, adaptability, resilience, and spirituality, to name a few. In some regards LLL seeks to recapture a more fully-developed…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Lifelong Learning, Resilience (Psychology), Foreign Countries
Conrad, Diane H. – Canadian Journal of Education, 2015
This article discusses social innovation in education informed by arts-based and Indigenous ways of knowing. I use the term Indigenous to refer to First Peoples' and their wisdom traditions from places around the world and the term Aboriginal to refer to the diverse First Nations, Métis, and Inuit peoples of Canada. The article looks at the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations
Peters, Sally; Paki, Vanessa; Davis, Keryn – Teaching and Learning Research Initiative, 2015
This project focused on the transition between early childhood and school and explored ways to understand and enhance children's learning journeys as they move between the two sectors. Transitions can be seen as an intrinsic component of life, with individuals in any society experiencing a series of passages "from one age to another and from…
Descriptors: Student Adjustment, School Readiness, Transitional Programs, Pacific Islanders
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Moyo, Partson Virira; Kizito, Rita – African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education, 2014
Identifying an instructional tool for merging scientific and indigenous knowledge (IK) is problematic as there is no clear guidance on how this can be achieved. Argumentation is recommended as a possible integrative instructional theoretical methodology as it imbues notions of dialogue and persuasion, while at the same time embracing the…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Teaching Methods, Indigenous Knowledge, Science Instruction
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Schwab-Cartas, Joshua; Mitchell, Claudia – McGill Journal of Education, 2014
This polyvocal text is both a narrative and a dialogue between two scholar-activist researchers working in rural communities in distinct parts of the world--South Africa and Southern Mexico--sharing their experiences of using cellular phone and camcorders, while also exploring the potential sustainability of these technologies in the context of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Handheld Devices, Video Technology, Community Study
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Sumida Huaman, Elizabeth; Valdiviezo, Laura Alicia – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2014
In this article, we propose to approach Indigenous education beyond the formal/non-formal dichotomy. We argue that there is a critical need to conscientiously include Indigenous knowledge in education processes from the school to the community; particularly, when formal systems exclude Indigenous cultures and languages. Based on ethnographic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Culturally Relevant Education
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Rix, Grant; Bernay, Ross – New Zealand Journal of Teachers' Work, 2014
This study investigated the effects of an eight-week mindfulness in schools programme delivered in five primary schools in New Zealand. The participants included 126 students ranging in age from 6-11 years old and six classroom teachers. The programme was developed by one of our researchers (Rix) to align with The New Zealand Curriculum (Ministry…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Students, Relaxation Training, Metacognition
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Christie, Michael – High Ability Studies, 2012
A systemic theory of gifted education, and in particular the notion of the actiotope receives surprising support from an epistemology until recently largely unrecognized and undervalued--that of Australian Aborigines. As part of an ongoing transdisciplinary collaborative research practice, a group Yolngu (north east Arnhem Land Aboriginal) elders…
Descriptors: Gifted, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Epistemology
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Wilson, Jonathan – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2012
In this article, the author discusses two books ("Tales of Burning Love" and "Bingo Palace" by Louise Erdrich) that highlight location and family as the foundation of home. The two novels suggest that "home" must be revised to include, negotiate, and, at times, embrace tenets of Western ideology in order to find or secure one's home. While various…
Descriptors: Intimacy, Tales, Novels, American Indians
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Botha, Louis Royce – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2012
This article contends that the third generation of cultural-historical activity theory as forwarded in Yrjo Engestrom's version of expansive learning offers the people of South Africa a framework within which to practically realise the objective of a more culturally inclusive and relevant education. By recognising and harnessing the divergent and…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Indigenous Knowledge, Foreign Countries, Guidelines
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Million, Dian – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
American Indian studies claimed a space to interrogate Western disciplinary epistemologies utilizing Indigenous ways of "knowing". This epistemological struggle has, not surprisingly, been that: a struggle. As the author writes in 2010, people understand that their continuing desire to bring Indigenous community-based ways of knowing into dialogue…
Descriptors: Sleep, Academic Discourse, American Indian Studies, American Indians
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Verbos, Amy Klemm; Gladstone, Joe S.; Kennedy, Deanna M. – Journal of Management Education, 2011
Circles are symbols of interconnectedness. Behavioral circles can be vicious or virtuous. Many American Indians are caught in a vicious circle of exclusion from the purported benefits of Westernization, entrapment in its negative elements, and the ongoing undermining of their culture and thus their identities. Yet Native Americans, along with many…
Descriptors: American Indians, Values, Indigenous Knowledge, Perspective Taking
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