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Corey Whitt – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2024
In this article, I analyze the interaction between America's federal Indigenous policy and music education as a distinct policy tool of Indigenous assimilation, tracing the transition from the Allotment and Assimilation Era to the modern Era of Self-Determination. Throughout United States history, music education has served the policy interests of…
Descriptors: Music Education, Land Settlement, Indigenous Populations, American Indian Education
Prest, Anita; Goble, J. Scott – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2021
In this paper, we explore challenges in conveying the culturally constructed meanings of local Indigenous musics and the worldviews they manifest to students in K-12 school music classes, when foundational aspects of the English language, historical and current discourse, and English language habits function to thwart the transmission of those…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Music Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Cultural Influences
Good-Perkins, Emily – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2021
The examination of racist, normalized ideology within American education is not new. Theoretical and practical conceptions of social justice in education have attempted to attend to educational inequality. Oftentimes, these attempts have reinstated the status quo because they were framed within the same Eurocentric paradigm. To address this,…
Descriptors: Music Education, Culturally Relevant Education, Racial Bias, Ethnicity
Moya-Santiagos, Paulina; Quiroga-Curín, Javiera – London Review of Education, 2022
Languages are not just sets of words. They are powerful tools essential to carry history, traditions, culture and wisdom. In Latin America, Mapudungun, the native language of Mapuche people -- the largest ethnic group in Chile -- can be threatened. A substantial linguistic shift has characterised the panorama of native languages of the current…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Languages, Native Language, American Indian Education
Sehgal Cuthbert, Alka – English in Education, 2019
This paper draws on Gramsci's concept of hegemony to locate the Newbolt Report, published in 1921, within a context of the weakening political authority of Britain's ruling class. One indication of this is the fact that in 1917 200,000 workers were involved in strikes in 48 British towns. The moral and cultural dimensions of the problems facing…
Descriptors: Moral Values, English Instruction, English Curriculum, Reports
Perry, John – English in Education, 2019
Since its publication in 1921, "The Teaching of English in England," otherwise known as the Newbolt Report, has informed both the shape of English as a school subject and the discourse about the teaching of English in England. The 1960s saw the report as promoting a cultural heritage rooted in outdated social values; the 1970s explored…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, English Instruction, English Curriculum, Educational History
Berryman, Mere; Egan, Margaret; Ford, Therese – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2017
This paper discusses expectations, policies and practices that currently underpin education within the New Zealand context. It acknowledges the ongoing failure of this policy framework to positively influence reform for Indigenous Maori students in regular, state-funded schools and highlights the need for extensive change in the positioning and…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Disadvantaged, Educational Change, Ethnic Groups
Reyhner, Jon – Cogent Education, 2017
With the passage of the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act of 2001, the United States spent millions upon millions of dollars in a largely unsuccessful effort to close the academic achievement gap between American-Indian and some other ethnic minorities and mainstream Americans. NCLB's focus on teacher quality and evidence-based curriculum and…
Descriptors: American Indians, Language Role, Self Concept, American Indian Languages
Rico, Braden – Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 2013
Kaupapa Maori theory was conceptualized in the 1980s in New Zealand as a framework for revolutionizing Indigenous education. Its success marks it as a transformational praxis beneficial to educators beyond the shores of Aotearoa. This theory propounds a practical, proactive stance that enables a shift in thinking away from the psychology of…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Foreign Countries, Pacific Islanders, Indigenous Populations
Gibson, Lindsay – Canadian Social Studies, 2013
The latest round in Canada's History Wars was set off by reports on May 2, 2013, that the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage was going to "undertake a thorough and comprehensive review of significant aspects in Canadian history." As details of the Heritage Committee's review emerged, controversy erupted as politicians, historians,…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Educational Policy, Politics of Education, Foreign Countries
Green, Paul – Ethnography and Education, 2013
By treating the household as a primary unit of analysis and social production, this article considers the mutually influential ways in which migrant families shape the educational pathways and experiences of Brazilian children living in Japan. Through an ethnographic exploration of relations between parents, children and their working siblings I…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Immigrants, Family Environment, Educational Experience
Gayman, Jeffry – Intercultural Education, 2011
Several years have passed since the adoption by the United Nations of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). Yet, what changes have happened in the lives of Indigenous peoples for whom the Declaration was written? This paper employs a framework of Indigenous educational theory to focus on the case of the Ainu of Japan and…
Descriptors: Expertise, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Educational Theories
LaSpina, James Andrew – Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 2011
How do Asia Pacific educators make sense of culture in the curriculum in terms appropriate to the twenty-first century? With the advance of globalization, is the idea of a culture (whether national, ethnic, or indigenous) as a way of life sustainable? In such a paradoxical setting where global forces appear to both affirm and undercut local…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Global Approach, Educational Change, Foreign Countries
Kee, Geok Hwa – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2010
Are the academic and social experiences of Chinese Malaysian students as much an outcome of the selective acculturation strategy of their parents as the linguistic assimilation policy of the government? Driven by economic necessity on one hand and pressured by cultural preservation on the other, Chinese parents first send their sons and daughters…
Descriptors: Cultural Maintenance, Acculturation, Social Stratification, Foreign Countries
Horst, Christian; Gitz-Johansen, Thomas – Intercultural Education, 2010
This paper explores the dominant approach to education of ethnic minorities in Denmark. Using the concept of hegemony and the political-science distinction between monocultural and multicultural positions as approaches towards a situation of increasing linguistic, ethnic and cultural diversity, the paper shows how a monocultural approach has…
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Multicultural Education, Cultural Pluralism, Foreign Countries
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