Publication Date
In 2025 | 1 |
Since 2024 | 3 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 7 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 14 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 17 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Miller, J. R. | 2 |
Wu, Xi | 2 |
Ahenakew, David | 1 |
Ahenakew, Edward | 1 |
Angod, Leila | 1 |
Armitage, Andrew | 1 |
Ayling, Pere | 1 |
Barman, Jean | 1 |
Beard, Laura J. | 1 |
Buck, Ruth M., Ed. | 1 |
Bull, Linda R. | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Secondary Education | 8 |
High Schools | 3 |
Junior High Schools | 2 |
Middle Schools | 2 |
Elementary Secondary Education | 1 |
Higher Education | 1 |
Audience
Researchers | 2 |
Administrators | 1 |
Community | 1 |
Practitioners | 1 |
Location
Canada | 56 |
United States | 4 |
Australia | 3 |
United Kingdom (England) | 3 |
New Zealand | 2 |
Africa | 1 |
Canada (Calgary) | 1 |
China | 1 |
Connecticut | 1 |
Indiana | 1 |
Israel | 1 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Dustin William Louie – Canadian Journal of Education, 2024
In this article, I examine truths and misunderstandings of colonization. An interrogation of the conflation between colonial and Western practices is explored through established literature and in practical examples of relationships to time, the Indian Act, and the term "Settler." By first establishing accessible and shared definitions…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Decolonization, Colonialism, Indigenous Populations
Kristen M. Lucibello; Catherine M. Sabiston; Ross M. Murray; Eva Pila; Kelly Arbour-Nicitopoulos; Jenna D. Gilchrist – Journal of Adolescence, 2025
Introduction: The present study examined the between- and within-person associations among negative weight-related experiences, weight bias internalization, and body shame, embarrassment, and pride in adolescents. Methods: Participants were 93 Canadian students (M[subscript age] = 15.54, 59.10% girls, 40.86% white) who completed a 5-day daily…
Descriptors: Body Composition, Self Concept, Body Weight, Social Bias
Angod, Leila – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2022
"Voluntourism," or "volunteer abroad," is a form of travel involving unpaid work intended to benefit a local community. Critiques of voluntourism as reproducing and, indeed, perpetuating global inequities are yielding a re-framing of voluntourism around principles of "partnership" and "equality." Drawing…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Student Volunteers, Social Justice, Travel
Carol A. Mullen – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
The topic of this academic review is settler slogans that mandate colonial school policy in North America. Also discussed is Indigenous futurity as a strategy for transforming education and countering the educational harm that comes from weaponized language. Beginning in 1887, the US federal government authorized colonial schooling, using the…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Politics of Education, Advertising, Mass Media
Carleton, Sean – History of Education, 2021
This article reveals that, contrary to common knowledge, schooling for Indigenous and non-Indigenous children in British Columbia -- Canada's westernmost province -- was not strictly segregated in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Officially, government policy stipulated that Indigenous children should attend separate day and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Indigenous Populations, Educational Policy
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
Wu, Xi; Tarc, Paul – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
Guided by the notion of 'flexible citizenship', as a strategy to accumulate and exchange different forms of capital across national borders, our ethnographic study followed eleven Chinese international secondary school students' transnational lives. This paper is focused on how instrumental goals of flexible citizenship cover over the emotional…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Teaching Methods, Citizenship, Foreign Students
Wu, Xi; Zheng, Jie – Educational Review, 2021
Using the notion of "flexible citizenship", this paper examines how Chinese international secondary school students accumulate and exchange different forms of capital as governed by their transnational social networks. This study draws on data from a 14-month ethnographic field study on the transnational lives of 11 Chinese students in a…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, International Schools, Asians, Secondary School Students
Griffith, Jane – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2017
Indian residential schools lasted in Canada for nearly 150 years, with the last one closing in 1996. Canada's recently concluded Truth and Reconciliation Commission has confirmed what Indigenous families have said all along: many Indigenous children endured abuse, prolonged separation between parent and child, and intergenerational legacies.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Boarding Schools, Indigenous Populations, Canada Natives
Ayling, Pere – Curriculum Inquiry, 2017
Risk permeates all aspects of modern life, and the International Secondary Education Market (ISEM) is no exception. Drawing on empirical data, this paper considers a specific type of risk: namely, the potential loss of cultural identity, which Nigerian parents associate with educating their children in the West. This paper argues that Nigerian…
Descriptors: Risk Management, Parents, Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
McCoy, Meredith – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
Middle school social studies lessons about American Indian people often leave the impression that Indians are part of a historical past that has little to do with America's present. Too often, lessons include information about Indian "extinction" due to diseases and warfare without discussing the ongoing resilience of American Indian…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Social Studies, American Indian History, Public Policy
Martin, Andrew J.; Papworth, Brad; Ginns, Paul; Malmberg, Lars-Erik – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2016
Most educational climate research is conducted among (day school) students who spend the bulk of their young lives outside of school, potentially limiting the amount of climate variance that can be captured. Boarding school students, on the other hand, spend much of their lives at school and thus offer a potentially unique perspective on…
Descriptors: Boarding Schools, Educational Environment, Student Motivation, Learner Engagement
Dupuis, Jenny Kay; Ferguson, Kristen – in education, 2016
This paper presents the results of study about an urban high school in Ontario that performed a stage play that portrayed the legacy of the Indian residential schools in Canada. We wanted to know the impact this arts-based response had on teachers and students. From the data that we obtained from focus groups, we identify four learning outcomes of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Urban Schools, High School Students, High School Teachers
Vindevoghel, Lana J. – in education, 2016
This paper explores the social construction of knowledge, identity formation, and the ways in which the education system supports dominant societal ideology. I examine how dominant historical and societal ideologies are deeply cultivated and facilitated through education systems, including forcefully through the residential school system and, in…
Descriptors: Knowledge Level, Identification (Psychology), Social Influences, Ideology
Indigenous Resistance and Racist Schooling on the Borders of Empires: Coast Salish Cultural Survival
Marker, Michael – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2009
The Coast Salish people of British Columbia and Washington State inhabit a borderlands region where they have negotiated the sometimes contrasting policies of two empires. Families belong to more than one village and must travel across the Canada-USA border frequently for ceremonies and events that bind the Coast Salish world together. Both…
Descriptors: Canada Natives, American Indians, Resistance (Psychology), Acculturation