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Bhat, Zahoor Ahmad; Waza, Mohd Ashraf – Online Submission, 2023
The aim of the study was to determine the retention/retention rate of primary school pupils (I-V) who belong to the "scheduled tribes" (ST). It also aimed to compare these parameters by gender and educational sector. A descriptive survey method was adopted and Ganderbal district (J&K, India) forms the study area. The primary data on…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Tribes, Geographic Regions, Gender Differences
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Ramírez-Terrazo, Amaranta; Garibay-Orijel, Roberto; Ruan-Soto, Juan Felipe; Casas, Alejandro; Reyes Chilpa, Ricardo – Applied Environmental Education and Communication, 2023
This work analyzes the safe consumption of wild mushrooms in Mexico, addresses the mushroom poisoning phenomenon, and discusses the role of communication and environmental education to prevent them. We documented that most mushroom poisonings happen in mestizo and transculturized indigenous communities. We constructed the online 'Digital…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Plants (Botany), Biological Sciences, Poisoning
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Charlotte María Sáenz – International Journal of Human Rights Education, 2023
This article inquires into a pedagogics that seeds a larger co-educational process outside of the Zapatista movement's autonomous territories. A Zapatista Seed Pedagogics (ZSP) is theorized as an educational, political, and ethical process that confronts oppressive power relations at all levels, growing a collective political and educational…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Decolonization, Social Change, Power Structure
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Sandro Claudio Vita – Sport, Education and Society, 2025
An increasing number of studies have focused on policies in physical education and physical education teacher education (PETE). Policies are important because they prescribe behaviours or a course of action, and they legitimise some knowledge and perspectives while discrediting others. In the field of physical education (PE), a white,…
Descriptors: Physical Education Teachers, Teacher Education, Cultural Pluralism, Diversity
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Aviaja Lyberth Hauptmann; Stephanie Maroney; Jessica Bissett Perea; Maria L. Marco – Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education, 2025
New approaches to microbiology education are needed to ensure equitable representation in microbiology and to build literacy in microbiology and science broadly. To address this goal, we developed a course held at the collegiate level that uniquely integrated microbiology, Indigenous studies, science and technology studies, and arts and…
Descriptors: Microbiology, Scientific Literacy, Interdisciplinary Approach, Food
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Theoni Whyman; Larissa Jones; Brad Farrant; Carol Michie; Nicole Ilich; Jason Shapcott; Doris Hill; Albert McNamara; Muriel Bowie; Millie Penny; Charmaine Pell; Oriel Green – Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 2025
Community Elders in Boorloo (Perth) identified early childhood education (ECE) as a priority area for Aboriginal children's research. This is due to a lower number of Aboriginal children attending ECE programs compared to non-Aboriginal children. Attending ECE programs sets children up for school success and is an indicator for positive life…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Early Childhood Education, Culturally Relevant Education
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Lira, Andrea; Luisa Muñoz-García, Ana; Loncon, Elisa – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2022
In this article, we reflect on a research method we called Circulo Domoche, part of a larger research project on the histories of schooling of Mapuche women in Chile in a context of continual violence against Indigenous people. It originates in the personal experience of the researchers with Chilean schooling and our academic work on education. We…
Descriptors: Memory, Decolonization, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations
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Hoskins, Te Kawehau; Jones, Alison – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2022
'Indigenous inclusion' has been the most common approach to Maori engagement in university education in Aotearoa-New Zealand. Increasingly, another orientation, based on different premises, which might be called 'indigenisation', is becoming evident. We argue that indigenisation offers more hopeful possibilities for New Zealand universities as…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Inclusion, Pacific Islanders, Higher Education
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Shay, Marnee – Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 2022
Epistemic and professional justice cannot occur without social justice. Politically astute scholarship should consider the pervasive injustice that indigenous people continue to face in their own country. The Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education (APJTE) can consider its role in this as a publisher -- if there is a paper that is about…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Professional Identity
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Michelle Locke; Michelle Trudgett; Susan Page – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2022
Growing research into the experiences of non-Indigenous early career researchers (ECRs) has identified a multitude of challenges that can impede early research career development. Expectations to publish, secure research grants and to deliver large teaching loads contribute to high levels of frustration and stress. While additional…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Undergraduate Students, Graduate Students
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Pye, Clifton – Journal of Child Language, 2021
The outstanding property of human language is its diversity, and yet acquisition data is only available for three percent of the world's 6000+ spoken languages. Due to the rapid pace of language loss, it may not be possible to document how children acquire half of the world's indigenous languages in as little as two decades. This loss permanently…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Indigenous Populations, Language Maintenance, Language Skill Attrition
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Bishop, Michelle – Australian Educational Researcher, 2021
For tens of thousands of years, Indigenous Peoples in the country now known as Australia have had a very successful education system in place, from place. Currently, many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students experience systemic harm in Australia's public and private schooling systems at unacceptable levels and are consistently positioned…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Tribally Controlled Education, Indigenous Knowledge
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Ramos, Ana Margarita; Briones, Claudia – Canadian Journal of Action Research, 2021
Based on our present working-experience with a Mapuche kimche (sage) and a logko (spiritual and political leader), we aim at intervening in broader debates on the intersubjective and intercultural production of knowledge. To do so, we pay special attention to contemporary mandates and pervasive conceptions about forms of practicing a better, more…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Anthropology, Indigenous Knowledge
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LeMay, Lenora M. – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2021
In this autobiographical narrative inquiry, I continued to make sense of a Deweyan-inspired narrative conception of hope (LeMay, 2014). I started with a remembered story that occurred on a First Nation shortly after I commenced working at a post-secondary institution. Following that, I shared stories that led me to wonder about a Deweyan-inspired…
Descriptors: Personal Narratives, Inquiry, Progressive Education, Psychological Patterns
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Roberto McLeay; Darren Powell; Bruce M. Z. Cohen – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
This article presents an innovative narrative inquiry study carried out in a primary school in Aotearoa New Zealand with three young people who provide insights into how they perceive, construct, give meaning to, and make sense of their own emotions. The analysis from this primary research draws on Foucauldian scholarship to examine how the…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Foreign Countries, Student Attitudes, Psychological Patterns
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