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Showing 1 to 15 of 27 results Save | Export
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Sergio Fernando Juárez; C. Kyle Rudick – Communication Education, 2024
The history of higher education in the United States is deeply rooted in colonialism. The communication discipline and the field of communication, teaching, and learning find themselves unable to completely sever their ties to settler/colonialism, white supremacy, and other dehumanizing ideologies. As the authors navigate the complexities of…
Descriptors: Educational History, Higher Education, Decolonization, Communications
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Aizuddin Mohamed Anuar; Olga Mun – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
What ethical and political considerations does zine-making raise in teaching and learning across knowledge systems and artful expression? This question guides the critical dialogue about a research project on teaching sustainability through traditional proverbs from Malaysia and Kazakhstan within a zine-making workshop in a UK university. Merging…
Descriptors: Proverbs, Workshops, Learning Processes, Decolonization
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Yanchapaxi, María Fernanda; Liboiron, Max; Crocker, Katherine; Smiles, Deondre; Tuck, Eve – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
The CLEAR lab is an interdisciplinary plastic pollution laboratory whose methods foreground humility and good land relations. In this interview, María Fernanda Yanchapaxi and Eve Tuck speak with CLEAR lab founder, Max Liboiron, and co-investigators, Katherine Crocker and Deondre Smiles. Together, they explore Indigenous perspectives on climate…
Descriptors: Plastics, Pollution, Laboratories, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Eames, Chris; Ritchie, Jenny; Birdsall, Sally; Milligan, Andrea – set: Research Information for Teachers, 2020
This article provides a critical commentary on the recently released learning programme, "Climate Change: Prepare Today, Live Well Tomorrow" (Climate Change programme). The Climate Change programme is sorely needed in this time of climate emergency and we believe it to be a great start in guiding teachers in this important work. Here we…
Descriptors: Climate, Environmental Education, Well Being, Teaching Methods
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McKinley, Elizabeth – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2020
This article explores Vanessa Anthony-Stevens and Sammy Matsaw's paper "The Productive Uncertainty of Indigenous and Decolonizing Methodologies in the Preparation of Interdisciplinary STEM Researchers". That paper reports on a small qualitative study on how STEM students in the field of natural resources management react to the inclusion…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Research Training, Researchers
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Fortunato, Michael W. P. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2017
This essay is a response to a paper by Avery and Hains that raises questions about the often unintended effects of knowledge standardization in an educational setting. While many K-12 schools are implementing common core standards, and many institutions of higher education are implementing their own standardized educational practices, the question…
Descriptors: Democracy, Standards, Educational Practices, Outcomes of Education
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Stewart, Georgina Tuari – Curriculum Matters, 2018
The school curriculum and teacher professional standards in Aotearoa New Zealand emphasise culturally responsive pedagogies for Maori learners. However, there is a gap between rhetoric and practice. Drawing on expert-interview methodology, and based on an interview with Tamsin Hanly about complex curriculum issues, this interview article seeks to…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Teacher Qualifications, Standards, Culturally Relevant Education
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Christie, Michael – High Ability Studies, 2012
A systemic theory of gifted education, and in particular the notion of the actiotope receives surprising support from an epistemology until recently largely unrecognized and undervalued--that of Australian Aborigines. As part of an ongoing transdisciplinary collaborative research practice, a group Yolngu (north east Arnhem Land Aboriginal) elders…
Descriptors: Gifted, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Epistemology
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Otulaja, Femi S.; Cameron, Ann; Msimanga, Audrey – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2011
Our response to Hewson and Ogunniyi's paper focuses, on the one hand, on some of the underlying tensions associated with aligning indigenous knowledge systems with westernized science in South African science classrooms, as suggested by the new, post-apartheid, curriculum. On the other hand, the use of argumentation as a vehicle to accomplish the…
Descriptors: Research Tools, Indigenous Knowledge, Persuasive Discourse, Racial Segregation
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Shipp, Cara – English in Australia, 2012
Aboriginal literacy is a difficult area of education with no neat answer; rather, a multifaceted approach to improving Aboriginal students' outcomes is needed. This article focuses on bringing Aboriginal perspectives and voices into the classroom; using the tools of multiliteracies and scaffolding literacy techniques; and being able to accommodate…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Cultural Awareness, Foreign Countries, Multiple Literacies
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Easton, Peter B. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2011
In this response to Hewson and Ogunniyi's paper on indigenous knowledge (IK) and science teaching in South Africa, I seek to broaden the debate by setting the enterprise of integrating IK into science education in its cultural and socio-political context. I begin by exploring the multiple meanings of indigenous knowledge in Africa, next consider…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, African Culture, Discovery Learning, Science Education
Boling, Elizabeth; Easterling, Wylie V.; Hardre, Patricia L.; Howard, Craig D.; Roman, Tiffany Anne – Educational Technology, 2011
In an asynchronous forum responding to a prompt positing that ADDIE (analysis, design, development, implementation, and evaluation) might be used in teaching instructional design (ID) as a safety net for designers without native talent, instructors and practitioners of ID revealed mixed perspectives on the role of ADDIE in design. Critical theory…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Critical Theory, Asynchronous Communication, Instructional Development
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St. Denis, Verna – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2011
This article explores how multicultural discourses impact the reception of Aboriginal teachers, and the Aboriginal knowledge, history, and experience they bring into Canadian public schools. The author argues that what happens to Aboriginal teachers in Canadian public schools as they attempt to include Aboriginal content and perspectives is a…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Canada Natives, Cultural Pluralism, Foreign Countries
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Sam, Michele A. – Social Indicators Research, 2011
Offering an Indigenous perspective, this commentary discusses collaborative research, shared meaning making, and knowledge building specific to child development, and reflects on social, cultural, and historical aspects that influence these processes. Drawing upon experiences of developing a collaborative research approach with which to engage…
Descriptors: Research Tools, Indigenous Populations, Research Methodology, Rating Scales
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de Beer, Josef; Whitlock, Elrina – American Biology Teacher, 2009
The whole world was united in its condemnation of the pre-1994 apartheid regime in South Africa. Apartheid meant that many South Africans were robbed of their democratic voices and cultural identities. In this article, the authors pose the question: Are you guilty of "knowledge apartheid" in your biology classroom? Does every student have a voice…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Racial Segregation, Biological Sciences, Foreign Countries
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