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Showing 1 to 15 of 42 results Save | Export
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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
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Agustin Martin G. Rodriguez – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
The Philippine educational system and its core curriculum is oriented toward the formation of the modern, autonomous, rational subject, particularly one that will fit into the contemporary global market and production system. Through this system, Filipinos are deepening the colonization of their rationalities and subjectivities by imposing a…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Western Civilization, Well Being, Foreign Countries
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Fiona Nicoll – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
As we re-imagine the role and value of the university, we need to pose new questions about knowledge and institutionality at a moment of intersecting crises. This essay presents a case study of a university in Western Canada, one shaped by the impacts of intensive extraction from human and more-than-human beings and now facing the challenge of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, Educational History, Political Influences
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Mehmet Firat – History of Education, 2024
This pioneering study investigates the transformative shift in the nature of education during the Neolithic revolution, utilising Göbekli Tepe's role as an archaic open school that attested to this change. This exploration is underpinned by the premise that "if education is a process of acculturation, its origins must be sought in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foundations of Education, Educational History, Open Education
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Anna Lees; Ann Marie Ryan; Marissa Muñoz; Charles Tocci – Journal of Teacher Education, 2024
In this article, a team of teacher educators collectively think through the many possibilities of how concepts such as decolonization, abolition, and fugitivity intersect with and are taken up by teacher education programs. To do so, we undertook a critical interpretive synthesis of scholarly literature spanning 2000 to 2020 to locate, examine,…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Postcolonialism, Indigenous Knowledge, Decolonization
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Kevin Skelton – Critical Studies in Education, 2024
This article investigates how critical pedagogy might broaden its purview and cultivate a more symbiotic relationship between formal education and life-long learning through a 'counter-critical pedagogy'. By reconsidering central tenets of Paulo Freire's "Pedagogy of the Oppressed" through the lens of Bernard E. Harcourt's provocation…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Educational Philosophy, Holistic Approach, Lifelong Learning
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Gift Sonkqayi – Educational Review, 2024
Epistemicide occurs when one knowledge is exalted at the expense of local or indigenous knowledge systems leading to the demise of such knowledge systems. In this article, I focus on how some conceptions and ways of incorporating indigenous knowledge systems seem to be entangled in the same misnomer to which they owe their existence (i.e. a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Epistemology, Indigenous Knowledge, Misconceptions
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Fernigil L. Colicol – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
I interrogate the Philippine Indigenous Peoples Education's operational construct of culture to explicate its indigenous knowledge systems and practices (IKSP) integration into the K-12 curriculum. Pragmatism as a philosophical framework mainly guides the argument in this paper. In the first part, I introduce the old and contemporary meanings of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Elementary Secondary Education, Integrated Curriculum
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Rose Amazan; Julian Wood; Kevin Lowe; Greg Vass – Critical Studies in Education, 2024
Setting in train various forms of curriculum and pedagogic change in schools whilst seeking to improve both teaching strategies and Aboriginal educational outcomes in Australia is a complex business. This involves a sustained effort to equip the next generation of educators with the skills and knowledges to identify, diagnose, and devise remedies…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Progressive Education, Educational Change
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Alyssa Mayer – LEARNing Landscapes, 2024
Interweaving my thinking with childhood stories of schooling, familial narratives, and experiences as a teacher alongside children, this article makes visible how my pedagogical approaches and desires for children to experience belonging shape my intentional work to recraft marginalizing curricula and assessment practices. In sharing my learning,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Experiential Learning
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Nozomi Sakata; Chris Yates; Hannah Edjah; Abraham Kwadwo Okrah – Comparative Education, 2024
Framed by Homi Bhabha's concepts of hybridity and the third space of enunciation, this study explores postcolonial relationships conceivably enacted through policy borrowing processes of learner-centred pedagogy (LCP) in Ghana. Nine Ghanaian and nine foreign stakeholders were interviewed. Conscious of the power imbalance implicit in traditional…
Descriptors: Student Centered Learning, Foreign Countries, Power Structure, Stakeholders
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A. T. Johnson; Marcellus F. Mbah – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
In this work, we sought to uncover the key strategies and challenges to the integration of Indigenous knowledge as knowledge management practices at a public university in The Gambia. It is often axiomatic in the literature that the incorporation of diverse epistemologies is a key resource for sustainable development; therefore, activities…
Descriptors: Resistance to Change, Educational Change, Decolonization, Knowledge Management
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Rhochie Avelino Ebora Matienzo – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
Filipino philosophy of education involves layers of meanings blurred by foreign assumptions. Any study that enlightens this theme is relevant and necessary. Hence, I intend to contribute to the aim of shedding light and exploring the richness of this discourse. Specifically, I focus on the historicity of Filipino philosophy, particularly under its…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Philosophy, Futures (of Society), Foreign Countries
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Dion Enari; Maryanne Pale; Inez Fainga'a-Manusione; Ruth L. Faleolo; Thom G. Faleolo; Glenda Stanley; David Lakisa; Innez Haua; Jioji Ravulo; Heena Akbar; Jacoba Matapo; Radilaite Cammock; Yvonne Ualesi – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
As Indigenous outward migration expands, some diaspora groups are larger than their population back home which is the case for many in the Pacific diaspora. Research with Indigenous peoples is largely conducted in their homelands, with minimal research on their experiences in other countries. As Pacific Indigenous academics, we employed a…
Descriptors: Immigrants, College Faculty, Indigenous Populations, Decolonization
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Amit K. Suman; Saurabh Kumar Shanu – History of Education, 2024
The paper explores the historical significance of Hindu College Calcutta, a key institution in colonial India's intellectual discourse. Established in the early 19th century, the college faced numerous challenges, including opposition from conservative factions and financial constraints, as it evolved into a hub for education and independent…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Religion, Educational History, Indians
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