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Sleeter, Christine E. – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2011
Over the last two decades in many countries, culturally responsive, multicultural and bilingual approaches to teaching have largely been replaced by standardised curricula and pedagogy, rooted in a political shift toward neoliberalism that has pushed business models of school reform. I argue that neoliberal reforms, by negating the central…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Change, Politics of Education, Business
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Walker, David; Tennant, Marc; Short, Stephanie D. – Health Education Journal, 2011
Objective: This research was undertaken to explore factors operating at the level of the clinic and the community which influence the development of the oral health role of Indigenous Health Workers. The research is a significant aspect of a wider study of the disconnect between the strong national policy support for the development of the oral…
Descriptors: Health Personnel, Public Health, Dental Health, Interviews
New Mexico Public Education Department, 2017
In compliance with the Indian Education Act (NMSA1976 Section 22), the purpose of the Tribal Education Status Report (TESR) is to inform stakeholders of the New Mexico Public Education Department's (PED) current initiatives specific to American Indian students and their educational progress. This report examines both the current conditions and…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, American Indian Education, Educational Legislation, Public Education
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le Grange, L. – South African Journal of Higher Education, 2008
In their article Ogunniyi and Ogawa explore the prospects and challenges of training South African and Japanese educators to enact an indigenized science curriculum. They discuss the nature of science and the nature of indigenous knowledge (IK) and also that IK is acknowledged alongside Western science as a legitimate way of knowing in the new…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Curriculum, Curriculum Implementation, Indigenous Knowledge
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Tinker, Claire; Armstrong, Natalie – Qualitative Report, 2008
While much has been written on the problems that can arise when interviewing respondents from a different social group, less attention has been paid to its potential benefits for the research process. In this paper we argue that, by being conscious of one's outsider status, an interviewer can use it as a tool through which to elicit detailed and…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Methods Research, Research Methodology, Questioning Techniques
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Brayboy, Bryan McKinley Jones; Castagno, Angelina E. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2008
This article examines the literature on Native science in order to address the presumed binaries between formal and informal science learning and between Western and Native science. We situate this discussion within a larger discussion of culturally responsive schooling for Indigenous youth and the importance of Indigenous epistemologies and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Informal Education, Science Education, Culturally Relevant Education
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Ryan, Ann – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2008
Science education in Papua New Guinea has been influenced by neo-colonial practices that have significantly contributed to the silencing of the Papua New Guinea voice. This silencing has led to the production of science curriculum documents that are irrelevant to the students for whom they are written. To avoid being caught up in neo-colonial…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Foreign Countries, Science Education, Science Curriculum
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Godbole-Chaudhuri, Pragati; Srikantaiah, Deepa; van Fleet, Justin – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2008
The global proliferation of intellectual property rights (IPRs), most recently through the World Trade Organization's Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Agreement, poses a grave threat for Indigenous knowledge systems. There is an increasing amount of "piracy" of Indigenous knowledge, whereby corporations and scientists…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Ecology, Foreign Countries, Corporations
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Jones, Alison; Jenkins, Kuni – History of Education, 2008
This paper is a selective consideration of the scene of the establishment of the first school in New Zealand in 1816. By foregrounding the possible views of the indigenous (Maori) people about schooling, the authors show that the promise of schooling was impossible to fulfil. Our argument is that the first teacher(s)' refusal to learn from the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Indigenous Populations, Teacher Student Relationship
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Cherubini, Lorenzo; Niemczyk, Ewelina; Hodson, John; McGean, Sarah – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2010
The stress and anxiety of new teachers is a pervasive problem that impacts upon teacher preparation and retention. Although new mainstream teacher concerns and experiences have been readily discussed in the literature, the same attention has not been invested for new Aboriginal teachers. In Ontario, Canada, in excess of 60% of the Aboriginal…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Teaching Experience
MacEachren, Zabe – Pathways: The Ontario Journal of Outdoor Education, 2011
This article examines the role material culture and making items can serve in establishing a sense of place or informing place-based educational practices. It is arranged around six principles that, if used in a learning context, connect material from a place to an enhanced comprehension of a sense of place. A critical component in making the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Place Based Education, Outdoor Education, Educational Practices
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Kidman, Joanna; Abrams, Eleanor; McRae, Hiria – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2011
The perspectives of indigenous science learners in developed nations offer an important but frequently overlooked dimension to debates about the nature of science, the science curriculum, and calls from educators to make school science more culturally responsive or "relevant" to students from indigenous or minority groups. In this paper…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Indigenous Populations, Scientific Principles, Foreign Countries
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Nkopodi, Nkopodi; Mosimege, Mogege – South African Journal of Education, 2009
For many years, education in South Africa has been based mainly on western values. This has contributed to the fact that many learners from disadvantaged backgrounds cannot see the connection between the education they receive at school and their everyday experiences. This may well have contributed to the high failure rate amongst mathematics…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Games, Indigenous Knowledge, Cultural Influences
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Shamah, Devora; MacTavish, Katherine A. – Rural Educator, 2009
For many rural schools the view outside the classroom window is one of scenic fields, pasture lands, or forests nestled at the base of mountains. Despite the proximity of rural schools to both agricultural land and the natural world, what little connection to place that may have existed in rural schools' curricula has been disappearing as schools…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Culturally Relevant Education, Indigenous Knowledge, Cultural Education
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Mayuzumi, Kimine – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2009
Rural Japanese women have been overlooked or misrepresented in the academic and nationalist discourses on Japanese women. Using an anti-colonial feminist framework, I advocate that centering discussions on Indigenous knowledges will help fill this gap based on the belief that Indigenous-knowledge framework is a tool to show the agency of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Japanese, Rural Environment
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