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Ojelade, Ifetayo Iyajoke – ProQuest LLC, 2009
The purpose of this qualitative study was to describe the ways in which Orisa priests and their clients conceptualize issues and concerns described by Western based approaches as mental health problems. The two research questions guiding this inquiry included: (a) how do Orisa priests and their clients conceptualize issues and concerns associated…
Descriptors: Focus Groups, Mental Health, Data Analysis, Indigenous Knowledge
Ober, Robyn – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2009
This paper will discuss "both-ways" as the philosophy which underpins course programs and operations at Batchelor Institute of Indigenous Tertiary Education, the only tertiary institution in Australia that caters exclusively to Indigenous students. This paper draws on recent research undertaken by the author focusing on the following…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Indigenous Knowledge, Foreign Countries, Evaluation Methods
Beveridge, Lorraine; McLeod, Julie Hinde – Intercultural Education, 2009
The action learning project described tells about one primary school's journey in addressing issues of social justice and equity in relation to Aboriginal education in Australia. The setting was a new regional primary school in New South Wales, Australia. The school needed to get Aboriginal Education on the agenda, in line with the mandatory…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Indigenous Populations, Picture Books, Experiential Learning
Nakata, N. M. – Australian Academic & Research Libraries, 2007
The intersection of public institutions managing large amounts of information and knowledge and new information and communication technologies has brought forward exciting and innovative changes to the ways information and knowledge have been traditionally managed. This paper provides a brief snapshot of some of the key issues facing the library…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Library Services, Information Technology
Collins-Gearing, Brooke – Journal of Children's Literature, 2007
Australian children's literature has traditionally provided a space for colonial Australia to perpetuate ideas about segregation, assimilation, and reconciliation. Children's literature offers a complex medium for readers, Indigenous and non-Indigenous, to question and challenge prevalent attitudes, in particular, the notion of…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries
Rooke, John; Altounyan, Caroline; Young, Angela; Young, Steve – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2007
A recent trend in public policy in many countries is the requirement for "joined up thinking" and "joined up working", including partnership within and between agencies, and between agencies and their publics. This in turn has led to a growth of interest in action learning as a means to bring about the organizational and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Experiential Learning, Public Sector, Public Policy
Tynan, Timothy; Loew, Patty – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
Can storytelling--a revered teaching tradition in many Native American cultures--be used to generate enthusiasm for science and technology among indigenous children and address the achievement gap that exists between Indian and non-Indian children? The Tribal Youth Science Initiative (TYSI) is an innovative new media project for young people, ages…
Descriptors: Achievement Gap, Science Projects, American Indians, Scientific Principles
Lee, Ying – International Education Studies, 2009
Indigenous peoples in Taiwan belong to the Austronesian racial group. Confined to their oral language tradition, knowledge about Taiwan aborigines based on written documents reflected the positionality of dominant ethnic groups. This qualitative study employed participatory research approach to explore the process of producing their own knowledge…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Observation, Interviews
Bang, Megan Elisabeth – ProQuest LLC, 2009
There is a great need to raise the levels of science achievement for those groups of children who have traditionally underperformed. Prior cognitive research with Native people suggests that problems with achievement for Native students may be more complicated then simple problems with knowing or not knowing content knowledge. This dissertation…
Descriptors: American Indians, Students, Epistemology, Indigenous Knowledge
le Grange, L. – South African Journal of Higher Education, 2009
In this article I survey educational research conducted in South Africa based on articles published in the "South African Journal of Education" ("SAJHE") over the past five years. The themes that feature prominently in "SAJHE" over the past five years are: "Africanisation and indigenous knowledge,"…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Higher Education, Indigenous Knowledge, Educational Research
Indigenous Resistance and Racist Schooling on the Borders of Empires: Coast Salish Cultural Survival
Marker, Michael – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2009
The Coast Salish people of British Columbia and Washington State inhabit a borderlands region where they have negotiated the sometimes contrasting policies of two empires. Families belong to more than one village and must travel across the Canada-USA border frequently for ceremonies and events that bind the Coast Salish world together. Both…
Descriptors: Canada Natives, American Indians, Resistance (Psychology), Acculturation
McGloin, Colleen; Marshall, Anne; Adams, Michael – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2009
This paper derives from collaborative research undertaken by staff at the Woolyungah Indigenous Centre, into our own teaching practice. It articulates a particular strand of inquiry emanating from the research: the importance of Indigenous knowledges as this is taught at Woolyungah in the discipline of Indigenous Studies. The paper is a reflection…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Teaching Methods, Intellectual Disciplines, Units of Study
Antal, Carrie; Easton, Peter – International Journal of Educational Development, 2009
In Africa, as in many countries of the South, democratization is sometimes perceived as a process modeled upon outside--and specifically Northern--experience. Formal civic education programs in those countries arguably reflect the same bias and have not always been notably successful. Yet there are rich patterns of civic involvement and democratic…
Descriptors: Informal Education, African Culture, Citizenship Education, Citizen Participation
Larson, Sidner – American Indian Quarterly, 2009
In his keynote address to the Fifth Annual American Indian Studies Consortium in 2005 David Wilkins began by commenting on earlier attempts to formally organize such a gathering in ways that might help establish and accredit Indian studies programs. He said he had the sense that the thrust of earlier meetings "was really an opportunity for Native…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, American Studies, American Indians, American Indian Education
Cultural Survival, 2008
Over the past 20 years, Japan has taken legislative and symbolic steps to recognize the Ainu as an indigenous people and to eliminate state-sanctioned racial discrimination. But the Ainu still experience discrimination from other sectors of society as a result of Japan's mono-cultural national identity, and the lack of judicial remedies to respond…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Nationalism, Racial Discrimination, Foreign Countries

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