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Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results Save | Export
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Raphaël Gani; David Scott – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2024
Many social studies teachers have argued that the mandate to distinctively value Francophone and Indigenous perspectives is unjust without similarly valuing other perspectives within Alberta's K-12 social studies curriculum (Gani, 2022a; Gani & Scott, 2017; Scott & Gani, 2018). Rather than outlining why these two sets of perspectives need…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, French Canadians, Geographic Regions, Teacher Attitudes
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van Deventer, Anriët; Steyn, Raïta – Design and Technology Education, 2022
This article refers to the South African Design teachers' attitudes towards the implementation of the 2020 Section 4 amendments of the Design Curriculum and Assessment Policy Statement (CAPS). The purpose of the article is twofold: first to establish the necessity for "awareness" of the teachers' attitudes towards curriculum changes,…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Design, Curriculum Development, Educational Change
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Carroll, Kay; Littlejohn, Kate – Curriculum Journal, 2022
The paper critiques the curriculum construction of historical consciousness within Australian school systems. National and trans-national discourses about identity, culture, gender, race and class influence the development of historical consciousness in Australian classrooms. During this unprecedented period of shared grief and global trauma,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, History Instruction, Historical Interpretation, Social Justice
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Ndaipa, Charnaldo Jaime; Edström, Kristina; Langa, Patrício; Geschwind, Lars – Cogent Education, 2023
Internationalisation of the curriculum has been the subject of various debates in recent years in higher education institutions. In particular, the need to incorporate local knowledge systems when internationalising the curriculum continues to be a major challenge in African universities. This study explores faculty members' experiences inherent…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Curriculum Development, Global Approach
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Puad, Lalu Mohmmad Abid Zainul; Ashton, Karen – Curriculum Journal, 2023
This paper critically examines Indonesia's 2013 national curriculum, implemented in 2019. The most significant change is the mandated use of formative assessment, which we argue is an example of policy borrowing, a trend also seen in many other countries globally. We argue that this policy has been adopted due to global and regional pressure on…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Formative Evaluation, Cultural Context, Foreign Countries
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Doria, Nicole; Biderman, Maya; Sinno, Jad; Boudreau, Jordan; Mackley, Michael P.; Bombay, Amy – Canadian Journal of Education, 2021
Indigenous peoples in Canada continue to face health care inequities despite their increased risk for various negative health outcomes. Evidence suggests that health professions students and faculty do not feel their curriculum adequately prepares learners to address these inequities. The aim of this study was to identify barriers that hinder the…
Descriptors: Barriers, Inclusion, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations
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Said Al Furqani; Sylvie Lomer – Journal of Comparative and International Higher Education, 2024
This paper contributes to the growing scholarship on internationalization of higher education, particularly in non-Western contexts. Literature in non-Western contexts highlights tensions around adopting approaches seen as 'global standard' where these reflect inequalities of power and prestige, shaped by coloniality. Drawing on conclusions from a…
Descriptors: International Education, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Power Structure
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Li, Wei-Ting; Shein, Paichi Pat – Environmental Education Research, 2023
The life experiences of Indigenous students are often overlooked in school learning, thereby causing dissonance in learning. To address this issue, this study incorporated local and traditional ecological knowledges of community in this year-long course of 'place-based Indigenous education for sustainable development', using place-based design…
Descriptors: Place Based Education, Indigenous Populations, Teacher Attitudes, Feedback (Response)
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Martin, Brian; Stewart, Georgina; Watson, Bruce Ka'imi; Silva, Ola Keola; Teisina, Jeanne; Matapo, Jacoba; Mika, Carl – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2020
Being Indigenous and operating in an institution such as a university places us in a complex position. The premise of decolonizing history, literature, curriculum, and thought in general creates a tenuous space for Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples to confront a shared colonial condition. What does decolonization mean for Indigenous peoples?…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, Educational Philosophy, Indigenous Populations, Curriculum Development
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Melitta Hogarth – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2022
For more than 20 years, there has been effort made within primary and secondary classrooms and curricula to include Indigenous peoples' perspectives. This has been met with mixed reactions from classroom teachers. Initial teacher education academics and providers have also been slow to implement and transform their teaching and learning despite…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Beginning Teacher Induction, Beginning Teachers
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Castagno, Angelina E.; Chischilly, Marnita; Joseph, Darold H. – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 2022
This article reports on the first three years of a teacher-led professional development program on the Navajo Nation. We draw on both quantitative and qualitative data from our end-of-year surveys to highlight some of the early lessons we have gathered from the Diné Institute for Navajo Nation Educators (DINÉ). We highlight two guiding principles…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Navajo (Nation), American Indian Education, Teacher Leadership
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Jia, Luo – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2019
This paper applies the key principles of mutuality, and knowledge categorization, along with Bernstein's notions of classification and framing of knowledge, to analyze the transition of Tibetan traditional knowledge into the modern university. This paper presents an action research along with an anecdotal reflection based on the author's personal…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Development, Universities, Minority Groups
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Lal, Aparna; Walsh, Erin I.; Wetherell, Alice; Slimings, Claudia – Environmental Education Research, 2022
The importance of a safe climate for human health is recognised by healthcare professionals, who need to be equipped to deliver environmentally sustainable healthcare and promote the health of natural systems on which we depend. The inclusion of climate-health in Australian and New Zealand accredited master-level public health training and medical…
Descriptors: Climate, Public Health, Medical Education, Barriers
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Tanyanyiwa, Vincent Itai – SAGE Open, 2019
Indigenous African education grew out of the immediate environment, real or imaginary, where people had knowledge of the environment. Indigenous education inculcated a religious attitude that imbued courtesy, generosity, and honesty. At colonization, Africans were thought of as primitive although they had their own systems, contents, and methods…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Climate, Curriculum Development, Geography Instruction
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Hlalele, Dipane Joseph – Australian and International Journal of Rural Education, 2019
Calls for a decolonized curriculum in South Africa are gaining momentum. Contrary to the school curriculum that privileges knowledge from a western perspective, indigenous knowledge systems appreciate and draw from local content and forms of knowing. A number of studies have expressed the value of indigenous knowledge systems, and the need for…
Descriptors: Rural Areas, Indigenous Knowledge, African Languages, Foreign Countries
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