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Mark Sung Alapaki Luke – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The University of Hawai?i is the only public higher education provider in Hawai?i. Starting in 1907 with Western academic ideologies, the Native Hawaiian (NH) ?ike and ?olelo were not a priority despite being the indigenous culture and language. More recently, the University has committed to becoming a Native Hawaiian place of learning and a…
Descriptors: Universities, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Minority Serving Institutions
Claire Kehaulani Ramirez – ProQuest LLC, 2024
In K-12 education, student voice is not often considered when establishing curriculum, addressing school policy, or creating a climate that reflects culturally inclusive teaching practices. Across education systems serving Indigenous communities within the United States, the voices of youth as a form of contribution are silenced, which echoes…
Descriptors: Hawaiians, Indigenous Populations, Student Attitudes, Student Empowerment
Fred Chapman – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2024
Over a decade ago, in early 2011, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) in Montana initiated a series of conversations with Northern Cheyenne traditional elders and officials at Chief Dull Knife College (CDKC) regarding ways to enhance resource management cooperation between the federal agency and the tribe. The BLM wanted to adjust--and in some…
Descriptors: American Indians, Tribes, Federal Indian Relationship, Land Use
Facing Colonial Canada through Pedagogies of Equity for First Nations: An Advocacy Education Project
Carrie Karsgaard; Thashika Pillay; Lynette Shultz – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2024
Education systems in "Canada" are increasingly highlighting the structural and material inequities faced by First Nations' peoples. However, most practices within formal education tend to focus on awareness campaigns and/or examining injustice as a historical event, as opposed to challenging the structural and systemic forces that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Culturally Relevant Education
Manulani Aluli Meyer; Eseta Tualaulelei – Qualitative Research Journal, 2024
Purpose: This article demonstrates the reach of Tuhiwai Smith's ideas across Pacific research. It discusses the theoretical and practical influence of her seminal work "Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples" through "holographic epistemology", an indigenous way of viewing knowledge.…
Descriptors: Hawaiians, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Researchers
Adreanne Ormond; Martyn Reynolds – International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives, 2024
A sometimes-neglected aim of education in the context of Maori, the tangata whenau (indigenous peoples) of Aotearoa New Zealand, is to build Maori students (tauira) as Maori, a process that supports them to navigate the academic world as well as enhancing their "Maoritanga" (Maori practices, beliefs, way of life). Notions of educational…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Well Being, College Students, Ethnic Groups
Camille Griffith; Stephanie Masta – Qualitative Research Journal, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to reflect on the role of Linda Tuhiwai Smith's book "Decolonizing Methodologies" in our work as Indigenous scholars. Design/methodology/approach: This article explores the application of Indigenous-centered research methodologies as outlined by Linda Tuhiwai Smith in "Decolonizing…
Descriptors: Methods, Decolonization, Indigenous Populations, Faculty
Keri Facer – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
Climate change has been called both a 'slow emergency' and an 'urgent crisis', it creates tensions between human and non-human temporalities, it asks some communities to 'speed up' and demands others slow down, and requires choices between present needs, historical responsibilities and future consequences. If students are to understand and…
Descriptors: Climate, Imagination, Educational Practices, Time Perspective
Asanda Boboyi – Research in Social Sciences and Technology, 2024
This conceptual paper explores the integration of "Ubuntu" philosophy in the school social work practice in South Africa, suggesting a transformative framework to enhance social work practice in a school setting based on the principles of interconnectedness, compassion and community. Drawing from critical social work theories, cultural…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Work, School Social Workers, Social Values
Khomkrit Bunkhiao; Jidapa Koomklang; Wee Rawang; Seree Woraphong – Journal of Education and Learning, 2024
The objective of this research is twofold: firstly, to examine the level of local food security and the community members' understanding of environmental education; and secondly, to develop a model that enhances local food security by implementing the environmental education practices of the community residents. Utilized mixed-methods research.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Food, Hunger, Regional Characteristics
Besse Darmawati; Sri Kusuma Winahyu; Rehan Halilah Lubis; Herianah; Pradicta Nurhuda; Amran Purba – International Journal of Language Education, 2024
The study of language and literature today are inseparable. Unfortunately, the phenomenon of Indonesian learning in junior high schools is in a hesitant position due to the lack of formulating literature as teaching material including indigenous wisdom-based literature that can threaten the extinction of indigenous literature. At Buru Island,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Culturally Relevant Education
Claudia Diaz-Diaz; Dorothea Harris; Thea Harris – International Journal for Talent Development and Creativity, 2024
This article documents weaving as a decolonizing epistemic tool for feminist futures that emerges from the work of our collective -- the Feminist Imaginary Research Network. As a collective of feminist adult educators who work in both the academy and women's museums, weaving challenges the centrality of rationality over other ways of knowing and…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Indigenous Knowledge, Handicrafts, Feminism
Cher Hill; Rick Bailey; Carman McKay – Canadian Journal of Education, 2024
What happens when traces of the past are invited to "haunt" the present, disrupting the colonial narratives inherent in local spaces, and creating openings for new stories and new relationships? Guided by Indigenous and post-human worldviews, this project facilitated community learning about the qic?y Slough, while collectively imagining…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Art Activities, College Students
Angelina Weenie – Sage Research Methods Cases, 2024
This case study shares lessons from an Indigenous research project based on Elder Knowledge about culture camps. Culture camps and land-based learning have become common practices in Indigenous education circles. This project brings into focus "kiskinohmakewina" (teachings) from Elders from two Cree communities who were invited to share…
Descriptors: Older Adults, American Indians, Indigenous Knowledge, Camps
Lydia Wilkes – College Composition and Communication, 2024
Avowing settler status positions settler scholars to join in storying less harmful futures for the discipline. This paper describes the author's journey toward continually avowing white settlerness through the Northern Shoshoni word daiboo' in the fulsomeness of its meanings, which include but also go beyond "white person," to help enact…
Descriptors: Whites, Social Justice, Racism, Indigenous Populations