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Bretton A. Varga; Sarah Shear – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2024
This paper leans into alterlife (Murphy, 2017) and connectivity ontologies (Harrison, 2015) to consider the implications of more-than-witness(es/ing) (our term) on social studies education. Taking a narrative approach, we engage with three more-than-human bodies (e.g., Boulder, Forest, Document(s)) in an effort to expand how act(or/ion)s of…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Colonialism, Humanism, Indigenous Populations
Nasrin Mirsaleh-Kohan; Adesola Akinleye; Becky A. Rodriguez; Alana Taylor; Elisa De La Rosa; Raven Gallenstein; Holly Ann Griffin; Gillian Hayes; Kyndel Lee; Richard D. Sheardy – Science Education and Civic Engagement, 2024
Land Acknowledgements have become a ubiquitous part of universities. They purport to remember, honor, and bear witness to the future of Indigenous nations and to recognize the land and honor local Indigenous communities. While acknowledging the Indigenous peoples upon whose lands we work is an essential gesture, the authors join other scholars who…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Indigenous Populations, Land Settlement, Decolonization
Ruth Heilbronn – Ethics and Education, 2025
What does decolonising the curriculum (DtC) entail and is it possible in the current context? I distinguish between a thick and thin idea of DtC. Thick DtC acknowledges that alternative knowledge systems exist, other than our western view of knowledge as 'justified true belief'. Thick DtC calls for recognition of epistemic injustice to indigenous…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Curriculum Development, Indigenous Populations, Cultural Awareness
Ryan Al-Natour – Policy Futures in Education, 2025
Australian Indigenous education policies are formed in settler colonial systems that are structured by institutional racism. Gumbaynggirr academic Lilly Brown (2019) argues that Australian 'education was incorporated into Indigenous policy as a justification for dispossession' (p. 67) throughout the 20th century. In recent times, First Nations…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Culturally Relevant Education
Holland, Alison – History of Education, 2023
The question of 'native' education became urgent in interwar Britain in the context of imperial expansion in Africa. Simultaneously, debates concerning black education were central to a global pan-African nationalist movement demanding black rights and liberation. In this context, education became a site of competing ideas regarding black…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, War, Blacks
Ballantyne, Tony – History of Education, 2023
Education was a crucial transfer point within modern imperial projects; it was a key domain through which relationships between the state, religious institutions, various agents of reform, and Indigenous, colonised and enslaved peoples were negotiated. Exploring a range of case studies, this article highlights the multiple trajectories of colonial…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Educational History, Religious Factors, Social Action
Alison Jones; Melinda Webber; Te Kawehau Hoskins; Jean M. Uasike Allen – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
This introductory 'research paradigms' article discusses Indigenous methodologies in relation to those approaches more familiar to educational researchers. A useful Table introduces methodological frameworks for research students in education, highlighting the significance of theoretical and philosophical thinking for research.
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Student Research, Research Methodology, Indigenous Knowledge
Melanie Kloetzel – Journal of Dance Education, 2024
To date, there has been minimal analysis of the intersections between dance pedagogy and the climate crisis. Arguing that it is essential to approach the climate crisis via the lens of decolonization and underscoring the indivisible links between modernity, coloniality, and the climate emergency, the author considers what it might mean to develop…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Decolonization, Climate, Ethics
Young-Ferris, Anna; Voola, Ranjit – Journal of Management Education, 2023
We explore privilege and its systemic intertwining with management education curricula. We take the view that "privilege as power and control" is intimately bound up with shareholder primacy as a foundation of mainstream management education (Lund Dean & Forray, 2021). In an attempt to tackle this, we provide a single case study of…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Curriculum, Power Structure, Advantaged
Cosgriff, Marg – Sport, Education and Society, 2023
Attunement, connectedness and an 'in tune-ness' with places have repeatedly been proposed to be central to sustainable, reciprocal human-environment relations and in turn, wellbeing. In this paper, I examine young people's emplaced and embodied attunements with local beaches bordering the neighbourhoods in which they live. More specifically, the…
Descriptors: Physical Environment, Well Being, Young Adults, Adolescents
North, Chris; Berning, Hannah; Karaka-Clarke, Te Hurinui; Taff, B. Derrick – Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education, and Leadership, 2023
Leave No Trace (LNT) is globally the most widely accepted minimum impact program and has been linked to behavior change and the maintenance of a range of ecological measures. Critiques of LNT have emerged, including that LNT ignores wider impacts that contribute to climate change and diverse world views. Many outdoor education students carefully…
Descriptors: Sustainability, Environmental Education, Outdoor Education, Program Effectiveness
Zion, Deborah; Matthews, Richard – Research Ethics, 2022
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in Australia, have historically experienced research as another means of colonialization and oppression. Although there are existing frameworks, guidelines and policies in place that respond to this history, the risk of exploitation and oppression arising from research still raises challenging ethical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethics, Research, Justice
Briana Nichols – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2024
Drawing on 18 months of ethnographic engagement in Guatemala with Indigenous youth, local community organizations, and transnational nongovernmental organizations, this article examines how young people imagine and work toward alternative futures at the intersection of extensive migration and a developmentalist push for educational attainment. I…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Development, Migration, Ethnography
Catherine Manathunga – Studies in Graduate and Postdoctoral Education, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to investigate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on doctoral education. Pandemics throughout history have generated new educational theories and practices, accelerated some trends and signalled the abrupt end of others. The unpredictable effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have particularly impacted upon First…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Doctoral Programs, COVID-19, Pandemics
Madeline L. Nyblade; Stephen J. Smith; Elizabeth Sumida Huaman – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2024
Indigenous communities at ground zero for extractive industry, industrial pollution, and climate change battle extant development agendas under coloniality that drive cycles of consumption. In this scheme bolstered by neoliberal policies, stewarding biocultural diversity is a clarion call and heavy responsibility for Indigenous community members…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Science Education, Biodiversity, Cultural Pluralism