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Jung-Hoon Jung – SAGE Open, 2023
Research on post-colonial curricula in non-Western countries continues to expand, with contributions from many scholars around the world. Many of these authors argue that post-colonial theories and the implications of those theories can help elucidate how colonial hegemony and ideology have affected the dominant discourse regarding curriculum…
Descriptors: Asian Studies, Postcolonialism, Educational Theories, Educational Research
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Fiji Phuti; Setlhomo Koloi-Keaikitse; Gaelebale Nnunu Tsheko; Seth Oppong – SAGE Open, 2023
There are concerns that soft skills assessment has been conceptualized within the Western context and may not reflect the indigenous African worldview. Without relevant soft skills assessment contextualized in the African cultural cosmology, there is a limitation in assessing African conceptions of abilities. The purpose of this study was to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Soft Skills, Indigenous Knowledge, African Culture
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Thompson, Adam – SAGE Open, 2019
Health promotion within Aboriginal communities has typically come from a top-down approach with government-funded health research directing the nature in which health information is disseminated. Previous literature has argued for two-way interaction that requires an equivalent bottom-up approach to integrate community beliefs and perceptions.…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Health Promotion, Rural Areas, Indigenous Populations
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Robertson, Lloyd Hawkeye – SAGE Open, 2021
Indigenization involves relating traditional cultures to modern methods, concepts, and science to facilitate their use by those populations. Despite attempts to indigenize both the practice of counseling and the content of educational curricula, mental health and educational deficits in Amerindian communities have remained. This article suggests…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Curriculum Development, Spiritual Development, Counseling Techniques
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Masenya, Malesela J. – SAGE Open, 2021
The debate on the de-colonization of universities in South African gained momentum after protests by students through the #FeesMustFall (FMF) and #RhodesMustFall (RMF) movements. At the center of these protests were issues like free access to education, accommodation, removal of apartheid and colonial statues, and the Africanization of the…
Descriptors: Universities, College Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Culturally Relevant Education
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Linkov, Václav; O'Doherty, Kieran; Choi, Eunsoo; Han, Gyuseog – SAGE Open, 2021
Current scientometric indexes do not encourage the linguistic diversity of sources cited in academic texts and researchers are not motivated to cite texts written in smaller languages. This diminishes the cultural diversity of the sources cited and limits the representation of small and indigenous cultures. This text proposes a scientometric…
Descriptors: Indexes, Language Minorities, Citations (References), Second Languages
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Juharyanto, Juharyanto; Sultoni, Sultoni; Arifin, Imron; Bafadal, Ibrahim; Nurabadi, Ahmad; Hardika, Hardika – SAGE Open, 2020
This study aimed at finding an effective leadership strategy carried out by one-roof school principals in remote areas. This study was conducted qualitatively with a multi-site approach. The data were obtained from the school principals as key informants and focus group discussion (FGD) involving all school principals, Indonesian Institute of…
Descriptors: Principals, Leadership Effectiveness, Stakeholders, School Effectiveness
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Tanyanyiwa, Vincent Itai – SAGE Open, 2019
Indigenous African education grew out of the immediate environment, real or imaginary, where people had knowledge of the environment. Indigenous education inculcated a religious attitude that imbued courtesy, generosity, and honesty. At colonization, Africans were thought of as primitive although they had their own systems, contents, and methods…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Climate, Curriculum Development, Geography Instruction
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Boisselle, Laila N. – SAGE Open, 2016
The article addresses how remnant or transformed colonialist structures continue to shape science and science education, and how that impact might be mitigated within a postcolonial environment in favor of the development of the particular community being addressed. Though cognizant of, and resistant to, the ongoing colonial impact globally and…
Descriptors: Science Education, Foreign Policy, Disadvantaged, Global Approach