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Yoon-Ramirez, Injeong; Ramirez, Benjamin W. – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2021
In this article, we discuss contemporary art practices as avenues for disrupting settler colonial narratives; we explore how the practices developed and adopted by contemporary Native American and First Nations artists can challenge settler colonial feelings. Employing the concept of settler common sense, we attend to the affective experience of…
Descriptors: Art Activities, American Indians, Canada Natives, Alaska Natives
Mullen, Carol A. – Educational Forum, 2021
This review article focuses on perspectives from Canadian Indigenous literature about decolonizing education on behalf of Aboriginal populations. The research informs accountability, education, and policy in Canada and globally. Components of colonization parsed in sources are tribal injustice, dispossession, discrimination, conflict, and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Canadian Literature, Indigenous Knowledge
Ng, Wendy; Ayayqwayaksheelth, J'net; Chu, Sarah – Journal of Museum Education, 2022
In this article, the tree is used as a metaphor for the birth, nourishment, growth, stress, pruning, resilience, and regeneration of decolonial work to indigenize museum education. At the center of this work is Indigenous peoples, perspectives, and ways of knowing and being. This principle has guided the work of the authors who assert that when…
Descriptors: Museums, American Indians, Figurative Language, Females
Kreller, Caylee – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2020
In this article I discuss the ways in which writing poetry and reflecting on its meanings may be a valuable tool for promoting an educator's reflexivity surrounding issues of reconciliation. As Canada embarks on the work of healing the difficulties its colonial past has caused its original inhabitants (i.e. Indigenous peoples), educators must…
Descriptors: Poetry, Conflict Resolution, Social Justice, Self Concept
Mullen, Carol A. – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2020
This article offers systematic review of literature on the educational colonization of Indigenous populations within global Canadian contexts. Questions guiding this study were, 'What colonizing dynamics exist in education for Canadian aboriginal populations, and what decolonizing dynamics suggest progress or advancement?' Across disciplines,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Testing, Education
Peacock, David; Thompson, Connor J. – Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement, 2022
We provide a case study of how Carnegie Foundation grants to the University of Alberta (Western Canada) during the Great Depression impacted the university's community engagement practices. Previously unutilized archival sources contribute to a historical survey of the university's Department of Extension as Carnegie philanthropy enabled the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, Departments, Extension Education
Godlewska, Anne M. C.; Schaefli, Laura M.; Forcione, Melissa; Lamb, Christopher; Nelson, Elizabeth; Talan, Breah – Journal of Pedagogy, 2020
Canada has long been a colonial country and an extractive economy. In the 20th century, with the adoption of multiculturalism and a global peace keeping mission, the country seemed to embrace a new ethos. However, Canada remains deeply colonial and, in spite of a judiciary that since the repatriation of the Constitution in 1982, increasingly…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foreign Policy, Canada Natives, Eskimos
Styres, Sandra – Power and Education, 2020
This article emerges from an analysis of the data from a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada-funded research project that examined the ways two universities were taking up the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and its Calls to Action. This article focuses on reconcili"action" as critical social action. A…
Descriptors: Universities, Social Action, Foreign Policy, Violence
Choate, Peter W.; St-Denis, Natalie; MacLaurin, Bruce – Journal of Social Work Education, 2022
Canada, like other nations with colonizing histories and ongoing colonial practices marginalizing Indigenous peoples, is searching for pathways leading to reconciliation. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission called on the social work profession to engage in the decolonization of social work structures and processes, including how it educates…
Descriptors: Social Work, Counselor Training, Counselor Educators, Universities
Koelwyn, Ryan – McGill Journal of Education, 2018
This paper draws on "reintegrative shame" (engaging the offender(s) in discussions of the moral dimensions of the act), and scholars who position shame as transformative. This paper reasserts shame as an ethical matter arguing that reconciliation is a particular response to the historical shame generated from the establishment of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Psychological Patterns, Ethics, Canada Natives
Daniels, Belinda; Sterzuk, Andrea – Canadian Journal of Applied Linguistics / Revue canadienne de linguistique appliquée, 2022
This conceptual paper examines the relationship between two academic areas: applied linguistics and Indigenous language revitalization. While the two domains have shared interests, they tend to operate separately. This paper examines: 1) possible reasons for this separateness; 2) mutually beneficial reasons to be in closer conversation and 3)…
Descriptors: Canada Natives, American Indian Languages, Foreign Policy, Females
Carroll, Shawna M.; Bascuñán, Daniela; Sinke,Mark; Restoule, Jean Paul – Journal of Curriculum and Teaching, 2020
In this paper we explain how teachers can subvert settler colonial epistemology in their classrooms and become 'imperfect accomplices.' Drawing on a larger project, we focus on the ways non-Indigenous teachers understood their role in teaching Indigenous content and epistemologies through their lenses of 'fear,' which we re-theorize as 'anxiety.'…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Culturally Relevant Education, Teacher Role
Groen, Janet; Kawalilak, Colleen – Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education, 2019
Drawing on an autoethnographic approach, we explore the role of museums in contributing to a decolonizing discourse. Through a guided tour of the Alex Janvier exhibition at the Glenbow Museum, a review of additional artifacts associated with the exhibition, and autoethnographic texts, we have come to see the deep potential of public institutions…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Foreign Policy, Museums, Role
Cole, Josh – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2019
This article brings the Italian activist and thinker Antonio Gramsci's theory of organic intellectualism and the Canadian historian Ian McKay's theory of liberal state-formation to bear on the "Indian Question" -- or how best to yoke Indigenous children and young people to the modern Canadian state. From the mid-nineteenth to the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Indigenous Populations, Cultural Differences
Douglas, Velta; Purton, Fiona; Bascuñán, Daniela – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2020
Indigenous perspectives and knowledges have been rendered "difficult" to teach and learn due to settler-colonial norms that are naturalized in Ontario's public K-12 education system. We explore how we as educators and teachers with diverse populations of students critically engage pedagogy and knowledge to take up Indigenous perspectives…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Difficulty Level, Teaching Methods, Intervention