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Harrison, Neil; Clarke, Ivan – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2022
The pedagogical urge to decolonise student thinking has been at the heart of the drive to embed Indigenous knowledge in universities throughout the western world. Despite ongoing efforts in the Pacific, North America and South Africa, there is little in the way of explicit curriculum scholarship informing approaches to the inclusion of Indigenous…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Indigenous Knowledge, Teaching Methods, Higher Education
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Lowe, Kevin; Skrebneva, Iliana; Burgess, Cathie; Harrison, Neil; Vass, Greg – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2021
2020 looms large for Indigenous education in Australia, with the 'Refreshed' "Close the Gap" strategy hanging over the collective heads of schools, Indigenous students and their families. After a decade of promises, there is now an acknowledgement within the government that programmes to improve student outcomes in literacy, numeracy and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Culturally Relevant Education, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge
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Harrison, Neil – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
Many great cultures of the world have recognised the impossibility of teaching. Governments in various colonial countries continue to spend huge sums of money on 'closing the gap' in Indigenous education, yet national assessment figures would support the claim that teaching is indeed an impossibility. This paper draws on some of Biesta's recent…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Human Body, Indigenous Populations, Self Motivation
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Manning, Richard; Harrison, Neil – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2018
This article offers a trans-Tasman critique of approaches to the teaching of history in New Zealand and Australia. Taking knowledge out of place and time and presenting it in textbooks is a conflicted task for schooling in both countries. The disembodiment of knowledge in history books has led students to the proclamation that the teaching of…
Descriptors: Personal Narratives, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge
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Harrison, Neil; Bodkin, Frances; Bodkin-Andrews, Gawaian; Mackinlay, Elizabeth – Curriculum Inquiry, 2017
Student capacities to actively listen, sense and feel are often relegated to lower order skills in an education system increasingly governed by measurable outcomes. While most school-based pedagogies focus their approach on cognition, this paper considers how we might make sense of the affective experiences that often resist the deep thinking,…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Case Studies, Instruction
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Harrison, Neil; Skrebneva, Iliana – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2020
Culturally Responsive Pedagogy (CRP) has become a driving force for change in North America and New Zealand and is gaining some recognition in Indigenous education in Australia. But as a model of learning and teaching, it cannot be imported unproblematically into Australian schools, wherein the past Indigenous students have had limited success.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Culturally Relevant Education, Indigenous Knowledge, National Curriculum
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Harrison, Neil – International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, 2017
Geography is about the places that make up the world. A key focus of the new geography curriculum in Australia is on different ways of finding knowledge about those places. Yet there is limited demonstration in the curriculum and its elaborations of just how students might understand those places outside the realm of their own experience. In…
Descriptors: Empathy, Teaching Methods, Geography Instruction, Cultural Awareness
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Harrison, Neil; Page, Susan; Finneran, Michelle – Australian Educational Researcher, 2013
This paper maps ethical and epistemological issues around attempts by a university to negotiate with the traditional custodians of the Sydney basin, the Darug, to facilitate the intergenerational transmission of knowledge within their community, and through the university curriculum. The theory and practice of research raised some important…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Universities
Harrison, Neil – Australian Association for Research in Education (NJ1), 2012
This position paper develops the case for a greater focus on the teaching of local histories in the Australian Curriculum: History. It takes as its starting point an Indigenous epistemology that understands knowledge to be embedded in the land. This connection between knowledge and country is used to examine recent literature on whether the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, History Instruction, Local History, National Curriculum
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Harrison, Neil – Australian Journal of Education, 2013
This article develops the case for a greater focus on the teaching of local histories in the Australian Curriculum: History. It takes as its starting point an Indigenous epistemology that understands knowledge to be embedded in the land. This connection between knowledge and country is used to examine recent literature on whether the teaching of…
Descriptors: Local History, History Instruction, Epistemology, National Curriculum
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Harrison, Neil; Greenfield, Maxine – Critical Studies in Education, 2011
This project is based on research conducted with 12 schools in New South Wales, Australia. It examines how each school incorporates Aboriginal perspectives in its Kindergarten to Year 6 program with a view to identifying quality practice. As we interviewed teachers in these schools, it became clear that there is considerable confusion over the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Perspective Taking, Cultural Awareness
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Harrison, Neil – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2003
This paper concerns my own reflections on ethnographic research with Indigenous students studying at university. I began the research by using the methodology of interpretive ethnography to discover what constitutes success for Indigenous students studying at university. But after some unflattering critiques of my initial interpretation of the…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Ethnography, Indigenous Populations, College Students
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Harrison, Neil – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2007
Research in Indigenous Australian education is at a dead-end. Researchers are still heading out into the field to look for new knowledge to answer old questions. The same epistemology dominates how we look, and where, while the methodology provides the researcher with a forced choice, one where either the student or the teacher is blamed for the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Epistemology, Indigenous Knowledge
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Harrison, Neil – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2005
Following the first significant research into Indigenous methods of learning, it was argued that Indigenous students could learn western knowledge using Indigenous ways of learning. Subsequent research contradicted this finding to take the position that Indigenous students must learn western knowledge using western methods and so this set the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Learning Strategies, Metalinguistics, Cognitive Style
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Harrison, Neil – Australian Journal of Education, 2004
This paper is based on research conducted with indigenous students at a university in the Northern Territory. It examines crosscultural theories of education which explain the problems of teaching and learning in indigenous contexts in terms of the cultural mismatch between the home and school environment. These theories position the teacher as…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Educational Theories, Social Theories