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José Falcão Sobrinho – Journal of Education and Learning, 2025
This article addresses the teaching of Geography from the perspective of field classes in a theoretical methodological approach to be applied in traditional communities. Here, field classes are considered an active methodology that enhances students' understanding of reality, involving local knowledge. The ethnoknowledge of traditional communities…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Geography Instruction, Teaching Methods, Field Studies
Troy Meston; Susan Whatman; Debbie Bargallie – Sport, Education and Society, 2025
In 2011, the Australian national curriculum called for the inclusion of Indigenous histories, cultures and perspectives/knowledges, prompting Health and Physical Education (HPE) teachers in schools and academics within higher education have experimented with and reported upon different purposes and ways of teaching Indigenous Games. However,…
Descriptors: Health Education, Physical Education, Indigenous Knowledge, Culturally Relevant Education
Sneha Parmar; Karen Malone; Tracy Charlotte Young – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
This paper explores the potential for extending relational ontologies to include a specific focus on human-plant relations. We theorise the emergence of a vegetal ontology, as a novel way of working and remaking theories around human-plant relations that can be applied to the field of environmental education. A vegetal ontological approach, as…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Plants (Botany), Place Based Education, Indigenous Knowledge
Christine Hatton – Research in Drama Education, 2024
This article considers how new materialist, Indigenous and posthuman feminist theories might be applied to drama pedagogy and research to empower young people to play "within" the trouble of colonial legacies and heightened climate crises. It references an Australian school project that used Heathcote's Rolling Role system of teaching…
Descriptors: Drama, Colonialism, Foreign Countries, Climate
Peter Cole – in education, 2024
There is an urgency for compelling new narratives of ecological survival that draw on Indigenous and 'othered' millennial intelligences and agencies. With a focus on the lifegivingness and sacredness of water, this paper is a call for collective inter-cultural cross-species oral-performative, recuperative conversations for re-learning to care for…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Music, Religious Factors, Water
Locke, Michelle Lea; Trudgett, Michelle; Page, Susan – Australian Educational Researcher, 2023
This paper provides a snapshot of Indigenous Early Career Researchers in Australia derived from demographic information collected in the first stage of the 'Developing Indigenous Early Career Researchers' project. Analysis of the data to date has evidenced much diversity across this cohort. However, one commonality across all Indigenous Early…
Descriptors: Researchers, Novices, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries
Christy Jean Kotze – International Journal of Mentoring and Coaching in Education, 2025
Purpose: Scholars have been sounding the alarm of novice teacher turnover crises for decades. South Africa is soon to be facing an educational catastrophe because of a shortage of experienced teachers. Globally and in South Africa, novice teacher attrition is high, and teachers entering the classroom often described feeling isolated and…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Mentors, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge
Christopher C. Jadallah; Heidi L. Ballard – Science Education, 2025
In the face of growing social-ecological challenges, multiple forms of expertise must be brought to bear in environmental problem-solving. As such, community-based science has been touted as a potential way to "democratize" scientific knowledge production, allowing for multiple sources of expertise to be harnessed and for learning across…
Descriptors: Expertise, Science Education, Community Involvement, Citizen Participation
Yuyun Elizabeth Patras; Muhammad Japar; Yuli Rahmawati; Rais Hidayat – Educational Process: International Journal, 2025
Background/purpose: Globalization and the advancement of communication technology have increased diversity and complexity, including in education. Diversity is currently in classrooms. This situation adds a need for multicultural competence. Materials/methods: This research explains the creation of new products through learning models to develop…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Teaching Methods, Indigenous Knowledge, Gamification
Ruth Heilbronn – Ethics and Education, 2025
What does decolonising the curriculum (DtC) entail and is it possible in the current context? I distinguish between a thick and thin idea of DtC. Thick DtC acknowledges that alternative knowledge systems exist, other than our western view of knowledge as 'justified true belief'. Thick DtC calls for recognition of epistemic injustice to indigenous…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Curriculum Development, Indigenous Populations, Cultural Awareness
Ryan Al-Natour – Policy Futures in Education, 2025
Australian Indigenous education policies are formed in settler colonial systems that are structured by institutional racism. Gumbaynggirr academic Lilly Brown (2019) argues that Australian 'education was incorporated into Indigenous policy as a justification for dispossession' (p. 67) throughout the 20th century. In recent times, First Nations…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Culturally Relevant Education
Duangrat Wongsawangsiri; Thitisak Wechkama – International Journal of Education and Literacy Studies, 2024
This research seeks to study (i) the local wisdom about the textile weaving production at Lan Khoi village and (ii) the pattern of integrating learning concepts and transferring knowledge in weaving at Lan Khoi village. Data from documents and fieldwork were analyzed and presented through descriptive analysis. The results indicated that the local…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Handicrafts, Folk Culture, Indigenous Knowledge
Johanna Funk; Tracy Woodroffe – Australian Educational Researcher, 2024
Acknowledging Australian Indigenous cultural diversity involves respecting local Indigenous knowledge and perspectives. This can be difficult for teachers who do not know about Indigenous people and their knowledge. The Differentiated Indigenous Pedagogies project evaluated digitally available information describing Indigenous in this paper,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Knowledge Level
Erin Kahunawaika'ala Wright; Jennifer Mahealani Ah Sing Quirk – Journal of College and Character, 2024
We examine the meaning and salience of social justice and solidarity building in higher education for Indigenous peoples through the lens of Indigenous resurgence. Indigenous resurgence centers Indigenous worldviews to guide our understanding and behavior while also prioritizing relationality to determine where and how to build solidarities with…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Hawaiians, Social Justice, Higher Education
Jennifer Utter; Rebecca McRae; Frances Mole; Kaitlin Brennan; Sally McCray – Health Education Journal, 2024
Objective: The modern Australian diet is largely characterised by too few fruits and vegetables and too many discretionary foods. This is very different to how Indigenous Australians ate prior to colonisation. Native plants and seeds like bush tomatoes, warrigal greens, Kakadu plum and wattleseed are not common features of the contemporary…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nutrition Instruction, Food Service, Food