Publication Date
In 2025 | 107 |
Since 2024 | 481 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 1483 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 2537 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 3529 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Harrison, Neil | 15 |
Matapo, Jacoba | 12 |
Bang, Megan | 11 |
Nxumalo, Fikile | 10 |
Page, Susan | 10 |
Burgess, Cathie | 9 |
Trudgett, Michelle | 9 |
Barnhardt, Ray | 8 |
Lowe, Kevin | 8 |
McKnight, Anthony | 8 |
Mika, Carl | 8 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Teachers | 58 |
Researchers | 24 |
Practitioners | 16 |
Students | 16 |
Administrators | 13 |
Policymakers | 13 |
Counselors | 4 |
Community | 2 |
Media Staff | 1 |
Parents | 1 |
Support Staff | 1 |
More ▼ |
Location
Australia | 548 |
Canada | 500 |
New Zealand | 293 |
South Africa | 180 |
Indonesia | 153 |
Africa | 112 |
Hawaii | 79 |
United States | 78 |
Alaska | 63 |
Mexico | 58 |
China | 56 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Goodman, K. A. – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2021
Social and emotional learning (SEL) to support students' wellbeing is even more critical within schools dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic. This article establishes why New Zealand primary schools need strategies to support the emotional wellbeing of students and why a prescriptive approach is not appropriate for the bicultural and multicultural…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Schools, Social Emotional Learning, Well Being
Tweed, Brian – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
This article discusses a research project in which curriculum mathematics education in an Indigenous Maori school in Aotearoa/New Zealand was conceptualised as a site of struggle. A bricolage of concepts from the sociology of education and Maori knowledge was used to interpret ethnographic data from this school. Findings suggest that struggle…
Descriptors: Mathematics Curriculum, Indigenous Populations, Pacific Islanders, Foreign Countries
Matapo, Jacoba; Teisina, Jeanne – Policy Futures in Education, 2021
This article presents a transnational Moana talanoa between two Pacific early childhood education scholars. Calling on both Samoan and Tongan indigenous understandings that breathe life into a Moana subjectivity is inclusive of ways of knowing, relating and becoming. We turn our attention to the importance of talanoa (stories/storying) in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Pacific Islanders, Indigenous Knowledge
Gard, Michael – Sport, Education and Society, 2021
I believe. I don't believe. Memories as history. History creates the future. Stories create oneself. Two years ago, I was involved in a conference session on post-human theory, organised by Rosie Welch and Nicole Taylor. This session forced me to interrogate my views and explore new connections to post-human scholarship. My position is not to look…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Animals, Educational Practices, Information Technology
Merritt, Eileen; Peterson, Alex; Evans, Stacy; Marston, Sallie A. – Science and Children, 2021
The United States is divided into 15 broad ecological regions, each one home to a variety of fascinating native plants. In the Southwest, creosote bushes are found in and around the Mojave, Chihuahuan, and Sonoran deserts at elevations below 5,000 feet and is one of the oldest living things on Earth--approximately 11,700 years old. This evergreen…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Plants (Botany), Sustainability, Cultural Awareness
Agustina, Eka Nurmala Sari; Widadah, Soffil; Nisa, Putri Afinanun – Mathematics Teaching Research Journal, 2021
Education currently only prioritizes mastery of scientific aspects and students' intelligence. Math problems are still related to fictitious general knowledge. For this reason, local wisdom-based learning is needed whose learning is packaged using objects, events, and various things that are close to students' lives to raise the local potential of…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving, Indigenous Knowledge, Values Education
Hernández Adkins, Sean D.; Mock Muñoz de Luna, Lucía I. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
Curriculum studies, like nearly all education scholarship, are predicated on Black suffering and death. Inspired by Christina Sharpe's treatise "In the Wake: On Blackness and Being," we will engage with the difficult questions of what it means to be curriculum theorists inculcated into whiteness and settlement. Pivoting Cheryl Harris's…
Descriptors: Black Studies, Whites, Indigenous Knowledge, Blacks
Ngoepe, Mpho; Saurombe, Nampombe – Education for Information, 2021
Educators and archivists in Africa have repeatedly raised the need for redeveloping university curricula to reflect local and global best practice. An African education curriculum case study by the InterPARES project (2013-2018) that covered 38 countries out of 54 revealed the existence of few available archival training programmes in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Archives, Information Science Education, Undergraduate Study
Maddox, Raglan; Blais, Genevieve; Mashford-Pringle, Angela; Monchalin, Renée; Firestone, Michelle; Ziegler, Carolyn; Ninomiya, Melody Morton; Smylie, Janet – American Journal of Evaluation, 2021
This study systematically reviewed evidence regarding health program and service evaluations in Indigenous contexts. Following the PRISMA guidelines and combining terms for 'Indigenous populations' and 'health programs and services'. Eight principles emerged: Principle 1: Adopting Indigenous led or co-led approaches is vital to balance power…
Descriptors: Health Services, Program Evaluation, Indigenous Populations, Literature Reviews
Kahuroa, Raella – Early Childhood Folio, 2021
The enactment of everyday democratic practice in early childhood settings supports children to practise being active agents in their own lives. Through learning to take action on matters of importance, practising collaboration and listening, and seeing that their ideas matter and have significance, children are positioned to become engaged…
Descriptors: Democracy, Early Childhood Education, Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Teachers
Langdon, Jonathan; Cameron, Sheena; Krieger, Natalie; Shani, Alhassan – Canadian Journal of Action Research, 2021
Participation by its very nature is iterative, meaning Participatory Action Research (PAR) must be responsive to the way participation manifests and what actions emerge from this participation. In the article that follows, we share the complex and intertwined stories of PAR in action in two social movement contexts in Ghana, as well as the…
Descriptors: Participatory Research, Action Research, Social Action, Foreign Countries
Aporosa, S. Apo; Fa'avae, David Taufui Mikato – Waikato Journal of Education, 2021
Pacific practice is grounded in "vanua" and "fonua," Fijian and Tongan terms encapsulating notions of land, culture and people. "Fono at the Fale" and "Veiqaraqaravi Vakavanua" are expressions of "vanua" and "fonua" cultural practice and are facilitated by, and through, the use of kava.…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Pacific Islanders, Cultural Influences, Indigenous Populations
Henry, Todd M.; Aporosa, S. Apo – Waikato Journal of Education, 2021
COVID-19 has had a major impact on collectivist cultures and their means of social interaction and maintaining contact with those in their wider community. This has particularly been the case for Pacific peoples living in diaspora, with COVID-19 preventing travel home and social distancing and forced lockdowns restricting the ability to gather.…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Pacific Islanders, Indigenous Knowledge
Thongdee, Witthaya; Promgun, Suraphon; Sawadtha, Suthipong; Namsithan, Somkhoun; Thubphumee, Panthiwa; Ruangsan, Niraj – Online Submission, 2021
Community development is a type of development that is unique in its own way, philosophies, concepts, principles and practices based on originality. The development is the process of educating people to develop knowledge ideas to gain potential of self-sufficiency. This is consistent with the first national strategy of Thailand to achieve the…
Descriptors: Creativity, Community Development, Models, Strategic Planning
Jaquith, Ann – Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education, 2021
This memo, which is the eighth and final one in the series of Field Facing Memos, describes a virtual learning excursion: the HA unSummit. When COVID-19 prevented travel to Hawaii last April, the HA unSummit was created. Members of the Assessment for Learning (ALP) network were invited to attend a virtual learning excursion to explore and deepen…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Cultural Awareness, COVID-19