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Showing 1 to 15 of 92 results Save | Export
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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
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Luke Arthur Meeken; Kristina Fox; Stephanie Harvey Danker – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2025
In this article, we discuss a curricular collaboration between the art education program at Miami University and members of a research and education center, the Myaamia Center, affiliated with the Indigenous nation, the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma, whose people originally inhabited the land where the university sits. One author is a citizen of the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Partnerships in Education, Art Education
Region 16 Comprehensive Center, 2024
In 2017, the Oregon Legislature enacted Senate Bill 13, known as Tribal History/Shared History. This bill was the culmination of decades of organizing and curriculum work by the nine federally recognized Tribes within Oregon. The law directs the Oregon Department of Education to develop a K-12 Native American curriculum in partnership with Oregon…
Descriptors: History Instruction, American Indian History, State Legislation, Elementary Secondary Education
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Cardinal, Trudy; Murphy, M. Shaun; Huber, Janice; Pinnegar, Stefinee – Studying Teacher Education, 2023
Inquiring into Trudy, Shaun, and Janice's experiences alongside Anishinabe Elder Dr. Mary Isabelle Young's living "pimatisiwin" (walking in a good way) and "pimosayta" (learning to walk together) with us, we show how her living in these relationally ethical ways grounded our creating and offering an "Assessment as…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Canada Natives, Teacher Education Programs
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Chimbi, Godsend T.; Jita, Loyiso C. – Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 2022
School reform policy in post-colonial societies is often guided by Euro-American theory from the North. Theory generated in the South is marginalised as backward and unscientific. The present study, couched within the Southern Theory framework, disrupts the hegemony of Northern Theory by examining the implementation of the indigenous philosophy of…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, African Culture, Curriculum Development
Terry Locke – Cultural Studies and Transdisciplinarity in Education, 2023
This book explores intersections between sense of place, the formation of identity, indigeneity and colonisation, literature and literary study, the arts, and a revisioned school curriculum for the Anthropocene. Underpinning the book is a conviction that sense of place is central to the fostering of the change of heart required to secure the…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Land Settlement, Identification, Indigenous Populations
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Robin A. Bellingham – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
The continued erasure of place and politics from modernity's education systems and disciplinary knowledges perpetuates racialised and ecological injustices and extractive relations. In this paper I affirm the necessity of using evolving methods of critical place inquiry and relocalisation in higher education to redress these erasures. I illustrate…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Decolonization, Indigenous Knowledge
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Besse Darmawati; Sri Kusuma Winahyu; Rehan Halilah Lubis; Herianah; Pradicta Nurhuda; Amran Purba – International Journal of Language Education, 2024
The study of language and literature today are inseparable. Unfortunately, the phenomenon of Indonesian learning in junior high schools is in a hesitant position due to the lack of formulating literature as teaching material including indigenous wisdom-based literature that can threaten the extinction of indigenous literature. At Buru Island,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Culturally Relevant Education
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Katelyn Barney; Tracey Bunda – Student Success, 2025
This practice report explores the development and impact of two podcasts that we have developed and hosted. Drawing on our experiences as academics working closely together, one non-Indigenous (Barney) and the other Ngugi/Wakka Wakka (Bunda), we discuss the reasons for choosing the podcast medium, the development of the podcasts and their emerging…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Indigenous Populations, Handheld Devices, Audio Equipment
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Pill, Shane; Evans, John R.; Williams, John; Davies, Michael J.; Kirk, Mary-Anne – Sport, Education and Society, 2022
The "Australian Curriculum: Health and Physical Education" (Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority (2020a) requires all teachers to include Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples', culture and history where there is scope to meaningfully do so. However, there is a general absence in Australia and internationally…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Culturally Relevant Education, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations
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Gabrielle Murray; Stacey Campton – Australian Educational Researcher, 2024
This paper begins with a discussion of a program of work to map and embed Indigenous perspectives at RMIT University, outlines issues relating to the uptake of its guiding principles and actions, and then proposes a rethinking of the work. The authors argue that non-Indigenous educators are often ill equipped to undertake curriculum deconstruction…
Descriptors: Racism, Prevention, Universities, Foreign Countries
Marie Battiste; James Sa'ke'j Youngblood Henderson – University of British Columbia Press, 2024
In 2007, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples became law, extending inherent human rights for the first time to the approximately half a billion Indigenous people around the planet. The declaration sets standards for respecting Indigenous knowledge systems and heritage rights, preserving identity and languages, and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Cultural Maintenance, Indigenous Populations, Canada Natives
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Christy L. Oxendine – Qualitative Research Journal, 2024
Purpose: This paper centers a decolonial and Indigenous methodological approaches to educational history research. This research offers how "Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples" by Linda Tuhiwai Smith impacts one education historian's scholarship alongside conversations of historiography concerning the Lumbee…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Decolonization, Educational History, Indigenous Knowledge
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Amy Thomson – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2024
In light of the results of the 2023 referendum, truth-telling should inform how educators embed Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander perspectives across the curriculum. It is imperative that students' experiences of Indigenous content are understood, as this will inform the legitimisation of Indigenous futurity in classrooms and how teachers…
Descriptors: Ethics, Indigenous Populations, Pacific Islanders, Indigenous Knowledge
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Sarah Veñegas; M. A. Dacela; B. I. S. Mangudadatu; B. K. Takata – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
Epistemic injustices are wrongs done concerning a person's capacity as a knower. These actions are usually caused by prejudice and involve the distortion and neglect of certain marginalized groups' opinions and ways of knowing. A type of epistemic injustice is hermeneutical injustice, which occurs when a person cannot effectively communicate or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Minority Group Students
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