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Meixi; Kalonji Nzinga – Review of Research in Education, 2023
This chapter is grounded in a closer examination of the multiple origins of our theories of learning. Two questions guide our inquiry. First, in what ways has the science of learning and development originated in the lifeways of our ancestors? And second, what are some Global South Side origins of our theories of learning? First, we use two river…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Educational History, World Views, Story Telling
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Carleen J. Mitchell – Journal of Educational Leadership, Policy and Practice, 2023
Research into leadership in early childhood education in Aotearoa New Zealand is in its infancy. At this early stage, distributed leadership has been identified as the most common style of leadership used in teacher-led early childhood education and care services. However, as a parent-led early childhood education service, Playcentre uses emergent…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Leadership, Indigenous Knowledge
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Lewis Williams – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2023
The past two decades have seen a proliferation of Indigenous philosophy in environmental education. Much of this anti and decolonial work has made significant advances in deconstructing western modernist subjectivities; re-embedding and re-situating Indigenous and western relational epistemologies into human-earth relationality, including critical…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Philosophy, Environmental Education, Futures (of Society)
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Sumarni, Woro; Sudarmin, Sudarmin; Sumarti, Sri Susilogati; Kadarwati, Sri – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2022
In this work, indigenous knowledge of Indonesian medicinal plants and their preparation for traditional medicines in Semarang Regency, Central Java, Indonesia, is investigated. This indigenous knowledge was incorporated into STEM-based teaching/learning as a meaningful aspect of science education in Indonesia. This indigenous knowledge was also…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Foreign Countries, STEM Education, Plants (Botany)
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Romanowski, Michael H. – Higher Education Policy, 2022
Under the facade of globalization, educational neocolonialism occurs through the transferring of educational theories and practices from the global north to the global south, potentially challenging and undermining indigenous intellect and epistemic formations. Neocolonialism is supported through the global importing of educational products that…
Descriptors: Accreditation (Institutions), Teacher Education Programs, Ethnocentrism, Global Approach
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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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Gain, Priya; McDonald, Christian; Sarich, Wiremu; Kahukiwa, Kelly – Teachers and Curriculum, 2022
In this paper we consider how recent taonga puoro noho marae wananga, in the Far North district of Aotearoa New Zealand, have much to offer the growth and development of bicultural relational engagement in arts education. The nga toi Maori authors highlight their aspirations, as leaders of recent hui wananga initiatives in Te Hiku o Te Ika (the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Art Education, Culturally Relevant Education, Indigenous Knowledge
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Anna Lees; Ann Marie Ryan; Marissa Muñoz; Charles Tocci – Journal of Teacher Education, 2024
In this article, a team of teacher educators collectively think through the many possibilities of how concepts such as decolonization, abolition, and fugitivity intersect with and are taken up by teacher education programs. To do so, we undertook a critical interpretive synthesis of scholarly literature spanning 2000 to 2020 to locate, examine,…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Postcolonialism, Indigenous Knowledge, Decolonization
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Line-Noue Memea Kruse; 'Inoke Hafoka – Journal Committed to Social Change on Race and Ethnicity, 2024
Pacific Studies is an interdisciplinary field that began in the twentieth century in Australia, Aotearoa, and the United States (Mawyer et al., 2020). The field sought to understand the area and region of Oceania, but later, many scholars took more critical approaches to Pacific Studies. These approaches have provided more perspectives from those…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Educational History, Universities, Indigenous Knowledge
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Tom Fabian; Steven Rynne; Jeremy Hapeta; Audrey R. Giles – Journal of Teaching in Physical Education, 2024
Pedagogization can be understood as an umbrella term for increased educational action. In settler-colonial contexts, the pedagogization of traditional Indigenous games has gained traction in recent years. As noted by a number of academic studies, traditional games have been used in efforts to promote cultural connectedness, inclusion, and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Culturally Relevant Education
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Lana Ray; Aurelio Sánchez Suárez; Kristin Burnett – Curriculum Studies in Health and Physical Education, 2024
This paper uses the concept of glocality to illuminate the ways in which the global operates as a hegemonic social construct for settler and colonial states to infiltrate and repress other local epistemological domains to assert and maintain control. Identifying four prominent and interconnected themes in the glocality literature: developing deep…
Descriptors: Sustainable Development, Goal Orientation, Indigenous Knowledge, Accountability
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lisahunter; Hayley McGlashan Fainu; Jean M. Uasike Allen – Curriculum Studies in Health and Physical Education, 2024
This paper documents historical and contemporary evidence of the HPE field's honouring Indigenous ways of knowing, being and doing -- and argues that much more needs to be done. Underpinning this is our philosophical belief that honouring Indigenous knowledges ultimately contributes to planetary health. We begin the paper with the positioning of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Teacher Education
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Brie Jontry – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2024
In spring of 2024, Diné College students in the course College Composition II began the semester by reading "Making Kin with the Machines" (Lewis et al., 2018), an essay by four Indigenous scholars who suggest their understanding of kinship drawn from Hawaiian, Plains Cree, and Lakota epistemologies offers a productive model for…
Descriptors: Navajo (Nation), American Indian Students, College Students, Writing (Composition)
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Thomas Wood; Dana Adkins; Shima Mohebbi; Jeremy Campbell – Science Education and Civic Engagement, 2024
Twenty-five years ago, the aspirational vision of a newly formed national SENCER initiative led one of the authors (Wood) to initiate a long-term relationship between the Smithsonian Institution and George Mason University, involving a residential, immersive approach to education focused on biodiversity conservation. In the Smithsonian-Mason…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Partnerships in Education, School Community Relationship, School Community Programs
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Kwadwo Oppong-Wadie – Research in the Teaching of English, 2024
The immigration of Black people from Africa, the Caribbean, and Latin America to the United States can be described as a phenomenon that is not of recent origin (Konadu-Agyeman, Takyi, & Arthur, 2006). The review of legislative policies at the height of the Civil Rights movement in 1965 and the subsequent abolition of restrictive immigration…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Blacks, Latin Americans, African Culture
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