Monthly Archives: March 2024

Bibliography: Indigenous Education (Part 488 of 576)

Allen, Keisha McIntosh; Jackson, Iesha; Knight, Michelle G. (2012). Complicating Culturally Relevant Pedagogy: Unpacking West African Immigrants' Cultural Identities. International Journal of Multicultural Education, v14 n2. This study presents findings from a case study of 18 second- and 1.5-generation West African immigrants. We draw upon notions of elusive culture and indigenous knowledges to highlight participants' complex cultural identities and respond to anti-immigration discourses through positioning West African immigrant students as assets in American classrooms. We extend culturally relevant theory in order to reflect the heterogeneity of Black immigrant experiences in challenging simultaneously invisible and stereotypical views of African values, knowledges, and ideologies. We call for practitioners and researchers to attend to Black immigrant youth's hybrid identities, indigenous knowledges, and enactments of cultural competence and socio-political consciousness within curriculum…. [PDF]

Liu, Ruo Lan (2012). The Process of Coping with Changes: A Study of Learning Experiences for the Aboriginal Nursing Freshmen. New Horizons in Education, v60 n1 p1-12 May. Background: Given the increasing presence of aborigines in Taiwan higher education, especially in nursing institutes, the retention and adaptation of aboriginal students is a critical issue for research. Understanding the adjustment and transformation process of aboriginal nursing freshmen is very important for improving their learning, but very little information can be found about their experiences. Aims: In order to provide the references to improve the qualities of multi-ethnic learning in the future, this study is to explore and gain a deeper understanding of the adjustment process of aboriginal nursing freshmen and the meaning they drew from their learning. Participants: The study recruited 20 female aboriginal freshmen from the five year nursing program. These students came from different areas or tribes in Taiwan. The age for these students was from 15 to 17. Methods: A qualitative method was adopted to conduct this research. The primary method for data collection was a… [PDF] [Direct]

Smith, Andy; Smith, Erica (2011). Does the Availability of Vocational Qualifications through Work Assist Social Inclusion?. Education & Training, v53 n7 p587-602. Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to discuss whether the availability of qualifications through work-based traineeships in Australia assists social inclusion. Design/methodology/approach: Industry case studies, of the finance and cleaning industries, were undertaken as part of a national research project on quality in traineeships. The two industry case studies were analysed to provide data on social inclusion aspects. A general discussion on the "pros" and "cons" of gaining qualifications through work, from a social inclusion point of view, is included. Findings: The industry case studies show many advantages of work-based qualifications for people who have had disadvantaged economic and social backgrounds. The study presents a model showing how work-based qualifications help to meet the twin social inclusion goals of employment and education. However in economic hard times, the need to have a job may rule out some people. Also, some doubts about quality in… [Direct]

Battiste, Marie (2010). Nourishing the Learning Spirit: Living Our Way to New Thinking. Education Canada, v50 n1 p14-18 Win 2009-2010. Learning, as Aboriginal people have come to know it, is holistic, lifelong, purposeful, experiential, communal, spiritual, and learned within a language and a culture. What guides their learning (beyond family, community, and Elders) is spirit, their own learning spirits who travel with them and guide them along their earth walk, offering them guidance, inspiration, and quiet unrealized potential to be who they are. In Aboriginal thought, the Spirit enters this earth walk with a purpose for being here and with specific gifts for fulfilling that purpose. In effect, the learning Spirit has a Learning Spirit. It has a hunger and a thirst for learning, and along that path it leads them to discern what is useful for them to know and what is not. However, Aboriginal peoples in Canada have been relegated to systemic poverty. They are the most economically disadvantaged Canadians by all standard measures. They suffer from isolation, unemployment, powerlessness, cultural imperialism, and… [Direct]

Salaun, Marie (2009). From "Primitive Mentality" to "Clash of Cultures": Stereotypes and Indigenous Underachievement in New Caledonian Schools. Intercultural Education, v20 n3 p231-241 Jun. The archipelago located in the South Pacific known as New Caledonia is part of the "confetti" of the French colonial empire. Violent uprisings in the 1980s revealed that the impact of colonization had a long-lasting traumatic effect on the aboriginal Melanesian people: the Kanaks. As indigenous school failure became visible, educational claims became a key issue of Kanak sovereignist struggles. Over the last 30 years the question of inequalities in New Caledonian schools has almost always been attributed to cultural factors. Rooted in a philosophical and anthropological tradition that postulates a radical Kanak otherness, contemporary analysis of failure in school seems incapable of overcoming this stereotype. This paper examines possible reorientations for a revival of educational sociology in the New Caledonian context. (Contains 2 notes.)… [Direct]

Bryant, Lia; Pini, Barbara; Ramzan, Bebe (2009). Experiencing and Writing Indigeneity, Rurality and Gender: Australian Reflections. Journal of Rural Studies, v25 n4 p435-443 Oct. This paper has two interrelated aims. The first is to contribute to knowledge about rurality, gender and Indigeneity. This is undertaken by the first author, Bebe Ramzan, an Indigenous woman living in the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands. Bebe shows similarities across rural and remote areas in Australia and details her knowledge and experience of home, rurality, rural communities, land and gender. The second aim of the paper is to examine issues surrounding the involvement of academic white women in Indigenous research. Writing from the position of feminist white women Barbara Pini and Lia Bryant reflect on theories of whiteness as cultural practice and in this paper contest representations of rurality in rural studies as white. (Contains 1 figure.)… [Direct]

Dunlap, Diane; Vorapanya, Sermsap (2014). Inclusive Education in Thailand: Practices and Challenges. International Journal of Inclusive Education, v18 n10 p1014-1028. In 2008, Thailand passed legislation on the educational provisions for students with disabilities to mandate the implementation of inclusive education. This article provides a historical overview of special education in Thailand and the emergence of inclusive education as it moves from policy to practice. To further identify the challenges faced in the implementation of inclusive education, this article reports the findings of a qualitative research study on the perspectives of school leaders from "inclusive schools" that reveal a range of issues, including cultural perceptions about disability, current policies, financing of inclusion and other salient concerns…. [Direct]

Madsen, Kenneth D. (2008). Indigenous Research, Publishing, and Intellectual Property. American Indian Culture and Research Journal, v32 n3 p89-105. In this article, the author makes a case for a greater understanding of Native research and how the academy can learn from it to become more sensitive to the concerns of the research constituencies. How academics handle the intellectual property that results from their research is also critical. What they make public and what they decide is better not to publish is only a beginning step. Making their efforts beneficial to research constituencies as well as academia can be self-serving as it protects their interest in future research possibilities, but it is also the right thing to do. In a world in which information flows are taken for granted, academics need to realize that not everyone sees the immediate benefit of their research. As such, academics have a special obligation to work out a means of returning their versions and interpretations of knowledge to source communities. They need to develop a positive rapport not only with the individuals with whom they work but also with… [Direct]

Stewart, Georgina (2011). Science in the Maori-Medium Curriculum: Assessment of Policy Outcomes in Putaiao Education. Educational Philosophy and Theory, v43 n7 p724-741 Sep. This second research paper on science education in Maori-medium school contexts complements an earlier article published in this journal (Stewart, 2005). Science and science education are related domains in society and in state schooling in which there have always been particularly large discrepancies in participation and achievement by Maori. In 1995 a Kaupapa Maori analysis of this situation challenged New Zealand science education academics to deal with "the Maori crisis" within science education. Recent NCEA results suggest Putaiao (Maori-medium Science) education, for which a national curriculum statement was published in 1996, has so far increased, rather than decreased, the level of inequity for Maori students in science education. What specific issues impact on this lack of success, which contrasts with the overall success of Kura Kaupapa Maori, and how might policy frameworks and operational systems of Putaiao need to change, if better achievement in science… [Direct]

Andruchuk, Grant; Babb, Mike; Polyzoi, Eleoussa; Sabourin, Joanne (2013). Building Success from the Ground Up: The Three-Year Student Success Initiative at Elmwood High School. International Journal for Talent Development and Creativity, v1 n2 p141-152 Dec. The purpose of this paper is to describe the Student Success Initiative (SSI) Pilot Project at Elmwood High School in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. The article examines Elmwood High School's profile, its guiding philosophy, and its past efforts to support students. Additionally, it outlines the Elmwood SSI model, distinguishes the principal features that led to the model's success, and illustrates the success of the three-year pilot project through multiple data sources showing improved student outcomes…. [PDF]

Mitten, H. Rae (2013). Evidence-Based Practice Guidelines for Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder and Literacy and Learning. International Journal of Special Education, v28 n2 p60-72. Evidence-based Practice Guidelines for Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) and Literacy and Learning are derived from an inductive analysis of qualitative data collected in field research. FASD is the umbrella term for a spectrum of neurocognitive and physical disabilities caused by prenatal exposure to alcohol. Data from a sample of N =150 was collected using sharing circles with Aboriginal elders and community members; conversational interviews with parents and their children with FASD; and interviews and focus groups with professionals who support children with FASD and their families. Special protocols were followed in collaboratively planning and participating in research involving Aboriginal communities. Aboriginal research methodologies utilized are situated among emerging, multi-disciplinary, qualitative research methodologies suitable for understanding the complexity of natural phenomena such as FASD. The goal of dissemination is to further translation of research… [PDF]

Bennett, Audrey Grace (2010). Global Interaction in Design. Visible Language, v44 n2 p149-159 May. Based on a virtual conference, Glide'08 (Global Interaction in Design Education), that brought international design scholars together online, this special issue expands on the topics of cross-cultural communication and design and the technological affordances that support such interaction. The author discusses the need for global interaction in design and its impact on design education and research. Authors in this issue are introduced. (Contains 1 table.)… [Direct]

McPherson, Robert S. (2010). Power, Prayers, and Protection: Comb Ridge as a Case Study in Navajo Thought. American Indian Culture and Research Journal, v34 n1 p1-23. Beginning in 2005, a five-year survey of cultural resources began to unfold in southeastern Utah along a prominent sandstone rock formation known as Comb Ridge. This visually dramatic monocline stretches a considerable distance from the southwestern corner of Blue Mountain (Abajos) in Utah to Kayenta, Arizona, approximately one hundred miles to the south. The sixty-six-square-mile Utah portion of the ridge and the object of study, lying between the San Juan River in the south to Blue Mountain in the north, offers a particularly rich landscape in which humankind has interacted during prehistoric, historic, and contemporary eras. The author's role in this venture was to provide ethnographic and ethnohistoric background for the field crews interested in the various cultures frequenting Comb Ridge and its environs. He turned to John Holiday, an elderly chanter, or medicine man, for much of the Navajo view of what this rock formation means to his people. This emic approach to what Native… [Direct]

Bartlett, Claire; Ehrich, John; Emmett, Sue; Helmer, Janet; Lea, Tess; Oteng, Georges; Smith, Heather; Wolgemuth, Jennifer R. (2010). Attendance, Performance and the Acquisition of Early Literacy Skills: A Comparison of Indigenous and Non-Indigenous School Children. Australian Journal of Learning Difficulties, v15 n2 p131-149 Nov. As part of an evaluation of a web-based early literacy intervention, ABRACADABRA, a small exploratory study was conducted over one term in three primary schools in the Northern Territory. Of particular concern was the relationship between attendance and the acquisition of early literacy skills of Indigenous and non-Indigenous children. Using the GRADE literacy assessment, it was found that students made significant gains in a number of early literacy skills (e.g. phonological awareness skills and vocabulary processing). Classroom attendance was strongly and positively correlated with the acquisition of phonological awareness skills and early literacy skills (e.g. letter recognition, word identification processing). Indigenous children attended class significantly less frequently than non-Indigenous children and performed significantly worse overall, particularly with regard to phonological processing tasks. In light of these findings, it is suggested irregular attendance contributed… [Direct]

Wang, Elaine L. (2010). The Beat of Boyle Street: Empowering Aboriginal Youth through Music Making. New Directions for Youth Development, n125 p61-70 Spr. An irrepressibly popular musical phenomenon, hip-hop is close to spoken word and focuses on lyrics with a message, reviving local traditions of song that tell histories, counsel listeners, and challenge participants to outdo one another in clever exchanges. A hip-hop music-making program in Edmonton, Canada, successfully reengages at-risk Aboriginal youth in school with high levels of desertion and helps them establish a healthy sense of self and of their identity as Aboriginals. (Contains 44 notes.)… [Direct]

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Bibliography: Indigenous Education (Part 489 of 576)

Davison, Colleen M.; Hawe, Penelope (2012). School Engagement among Aboriginal Students in Northern Canada: Perspectives From Activity Settings Theory. Journal of School Health, v82 n2 p65-74 Feb. Background: Educational disengagement is a public health concern among Aboriginal populations in many countries. It has been investigated previously in a variety of ways, with the conventional focus being on the children themselves. Activity settings are events and places, theorized in terms of their symbols, roles, time frame, funds, people, and physical location. According to the theory, particular behaviors and experiences are shaped by different configurations among these elements. This study explored how activity settings theory might provide new insight on school engagement. Methods: Ethnographic study was undertaken at a grades primary to 12 school in a remote First Nations community in Canada's Northwest Territories. We collected data through interviews, focus groups, archival material, and field notes from 7 months of participant observation. An activity settings model acted as template for data collection and interpretation. Results: Different aspects of the school's… [Direct]

Bennett, Justin B.; Ebworth, Miriam Eisenstein; Goldstein, Marjorie; Gottlieb, Barbara; Gottlieb, Jay (2011). U. S. Mainland-Born and Non-Mainland-Born Children Referred for Special Education. Journal of Multilingual Education Research, v2 Article 4 p35-55 Spr. In this study, we compared the referrals for special education evaluation of U.S. mainland-born children with those of mostly Latino non-mainland-born children in two school systems in the Northeastern United States. The investigation focused on whether there was a significant difference between referrals for special education from each group, based on either language or behavior. According to the literature, nonnatives are both overrepresented and underrepresented in special education, with reasons for referral including problematic use of language and inappropriate behavior. The researchers found that referrals for behavior in our sample were more frequent among natives compared with nonnatives, while referral for language use did not differ significantly between the groups. We discuss variables that could account for these findings including nonnative acculturation, the availability of alternative curricula for these learners, and the fact that many native children in inner-city… [PDF]

(2010). Colleges Serving Aboriginal Learners and Communities: 2010 Environmental Scan. Trends, Programs, Services, Partnerships, Challenges and Lessons Learned. Association of Canadian Community Colleges In 2005, the Association of Canadian Community Colleges (ACCC) released the first report on college Aboriginal programs and services entitled Canadian Colleges and Institutes–Meeting the Needs of Aboriginal Learners. The 2005 report provided an overview of the programs and services offered and described how colleges work with Aboriginal communities to deliver a diverse range of programs and support services with a view to better serving the needs of Aboriginal learners. Five years later, ACCC conducted an environmental scan of Aboriginal engagement at colleges which included consultations with the ACCC National Aboriginal Programs and Services Committee, a review and analysis of statistics and research on Aboriginal participation in post-secondary education, in particular from Statistics Canada sources, an on-line survey with member colleges to garner policy perspectives on Aboriginal program and service delivery, and a search of college websites to build inventories of Aboriginal… [PDF]

Bartlett, Claire; Helmer, Janet; Lea, Tess; Wolgemuth, Jennifer R. (2011). Coaching (and) Commitment: Linking Ongoing Professional Development, Quality Teaching and Student Outcomes. Professional Development in Education, v37 n2 p197-211. This research conducted in primary schools in Northern Australia evaluated the effectiveness of the web-based program ABRACADABRA (ABRA) as a tool to complement early childhood literacy instruction in an Australian and Indigenous context. A further component of this research was to monitor implementation fidelity. The ABRA training was built around professional development best practices to address the challenges of providing ongoing training in remote areas. Teachers attended a one-day workshop that trained them in the use of ABRA, and continued learning was reinforced by pairing teachers with a literacy coach. Data were gathered through an implementation fidelity measure, researcher field notes, focus groups, teacher logbooks, and the "Early Language and Literacy Classroom Observation" tool. This paper outlines challenges and successes that the researcher/coaches experienced while supporting teachers. (Contains 2 tables.)… [Direct]

Bentley, Michael L.; Mueller, Michael P. (2009). Environmental and Science Education in Developing Nations: A Ghanaian Approach to Renewing and Revitalizing the Local Community and Ecosystems. Journal of Environmental Education, v40 n4 p53-63 Sum. Curriculum reform in environmental and science education now taking place in Ghana focuses on the community and ecosystems as the context of education. In Ghana, students conduct science investigations that include games, word searches, crossword puzzles, case studies, role play, debates, projects, and ecological profiles. This curriculum reflects an acknowledgement of the effect of conserving and protecting Ghanaian intergenerational knowledge and skills concerning the natural systems, including those of preserving ceremonies, personal expectations, narratives, beliefs, and values. The authors highlight these efforts to counter notions that Ghanaian education is still developing and to contrast the ideologies of seemingly developed educational landscapes in the United States. The authors argue that educational reform in the United States could benefit from an understanding of environmental and science education in seemingly developing nations…. [Direct]

Olajide, Stephen Billy (2010). Folklore and Culture as Literacy Resources for National Emancipation. International Education Studies, v3 n2 p200-205 May. Literacy counts a lot for development and progress. Efficient literacy induces and sustains good governance. Hence, all nations strive to attain balanced literacy. However any literacy programme that ignores the context of operation is not likely to be very successful. This paper canvasses that folklore and culture are essential ingredients for revitalizing literacy for national emancipation…. [PDF]

Giroux, Danielle; Helm, Susana; Kaliades, Alexis; Kawano, Kaycee Nahe; Kulis, Stephen; Okamoto, Scott K. (2010). A Typology and Analysis of Drug Resistance Strategies of Rural Native Hawaiian Youth. Journal of Primary Prevention, v31 n5-6 p311-319 Dec. This study examines the drug resistance strategies described by Native Hawaiian youth residing in rural communities. Sixty-four youth from 7 middle and intermediate schools on the Island of Hawai'i participated in a series of gender-specific focus groups. Youth responded to 15 drug-related problem situations developed and validated from prior research. A total of 509 responses reflecting primary or secondary drug resistance strategies were identified by the youth, which were qualitatively collapsed into 16 different categories. Primary drug resistance strategies were those that participants listed as a single response, or the first part of a two-part response, while secondary drug resistance strategies were those that were used in tandem with primary drug resistance strategies. Over half of the responses reflecting primary drug resistance strategies fell into three different categories ("refuse," "explain," or "angry refusal"), whereas over half of the… [Direct]

Ball, Stephen; Braun, Annette; Vincent, Carol (2010). Local Links, Local Knowledge: Choosing Care Settings and Schools. British Educational Research Journal, v36 n2 p279-298 Apr. This article draws on data from two recently completed Economic and Social Research Council funded projects in order to examine class differences and similarities in choice of school and choice of childcare. The authors argue that there is every reason to believe that in many circumstances, within its particular mechanisms and practices, choice produces specific and pervasive forms of inequity. The processes by which working-class parents in one study chose care settings and schools could be seen as less skilled, less informed, less careful than the decision making of many of the middle-class respondents. However, this is not an argument that the authors advance, noting instead that the practices and meanings of choice are subject to significant social, cultural and economic variations in terms of who gets to choose, who gets their choices, and what, how and why people choose when they are able to. The authors argue that there are alternative sets of priorities in play for the… [Direct]

Benveniste, Jodie (2013). A Practice Guide for Working with Families from Pre-Birth to Eight Years: Engaging Families in the Early Childhood Development Story. Standing Council on School Education and Early Childhood This guide was created because parents revealed, through extensive social research, that they often received inconsistent and confusing parenting information from different professionals and practitioners across different disciplines, leading to misunderstandings and a lack of confidence about how best to support their children's development. In response, the Standing Council on School Education and Early Childhood (SCSEEC) looked to the neuroscience evidence to determine what key information and practices will help professionals and practitioners to support parents and families to achieve the best outcomes for children. This guide was designed for professionals and practitioners to work from the same starting point, use a common language, and provide consistent messages about the early years regardless of what service, support, or information families access. This guide includes: (1) Shared Values that underpin work with families; (2) Four Key Principles of early childhood… [PDF]

Cushman, Ellen (2008). Toward a Rhetoric of Self-Representation: Identity Politics in Indian Country and Rhetoric and Composition. College Composition and Communication, v60 n2 p321-365 Dec. Scholars in rhetoric and composition have explored political issues of identity and language for some time; however, we have only begun to develop an understanding of why the identity politics of Native scholars are so different from other scholars of color and whites. Native scholars take considerable risks in composing identities–they can face censure from their communities and other scholars of color, perhaps even charges of identity fraud, if their self-representations are not persuasive. I describe and analyze the cases of three Native scholars in order to explore the claims, evidence, and rhetorical exigencies present when a scholar claims to be Native American. Ward Churchill's case establishes the differences between self-identification and self-representation as these relate to the vexing problem of identity fraud in Indian Country. Resa Crane Bizzaro's case reveals a persuasive self-representation because it includes authenticity markers recognized by many Native… [Direct]

Hare, Jan; Pidgeon, Michelle (2011). The Way of the Warrior: Indigenous Youth Navigating the Challenges of Schooling. Canadian Journal of Education, v34 n2 p93-111. This study examines the educational experiences of 39 First Nations youth, ages 16-20 years, from two, First Nations, on-reserve, communities in northern Ontario, who share their reflections and experiences of reserve and public schooling. We drew on the Indigenous metaphor of the "new warrior" to analyze how these youth experienced and responded to educational challenges. Their conversations describe how racism framed their schooling experiences and how they made use of their Indigenous sources of strength, which included family and community structures, to address the inequalities in their schooling. (Contains 1 footnote.)… [PDF] [Direct]

Toth, Christie (2013). Beyond Assimilation: Tribal Colleges, Basic Writing, and the Exigencies of Settler Colonialism. Journal of Basic Writing, v32 n1 p4-36 Spr. This article discusses basic writing pedagogy at a two-year tribal college, an institution type that has not been visible in the basic writing literature to date. In many tribal college contexts, socioeconomic challenges, under-resourced K-12 schools, and linguistic diversity all contribute to high student placement rates into "developmental" writing courses. Operating from the understanding that tribal college writing curricula are assertions of rhetorical sovereignty, I present a narrative of the pedagogical reasoning that led me to structure my basic writing course around the exigencies of U.S. settler colonialism–that is, the settler state's ongoing political, social, and economic project of controlling Indigenous peoples, lands, and resources. This approach encourages NativeAmerican students to develop critical language awareness and invites them to consider the importance of writing for furthering the interests of their communities and nations while meeting the… [PDF]

Han, Sandrine; Reisberg, Mira (2009). (En)Countering Social and Environmental Messages in the Rainforest Cafe [sic], Children's Picturebooks, and Other Visual Culture Sites. International Journal of Education & the Arts, v10 n22 Sep. Our study critically examines social and environmental messages in a range of visual sites educating about rainforest environments. We focus primarily on the Rainforest Cafe, an international series of rainforest-themed edutainment restaurant/stores, whose inherent contradictions between consumption and conservation are quite disturbing when viewed as part of the null curriculum (Hollins, 1996). We then propose an alternate approach to teaching and learning about rainforest environments. This approach teaches students how to deconstruct visual culture environmental messages, such as those in the Rainforest Cafe, fine art, popular films, and children's picturebooks to learn from both accurate and inaccurate images while promoting environmental caring for the rainforest \and\ students' own environments through art. (Contains 13 notes.)… [PDF]

Han, Jinghe; Singh, Michael (2010). Teacher Education for World English Speaking Pre-Service Teachers: Making Transnational Knowledge Exchange for Mutual Learning. Teaching and Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, v26 n6 p1300-1308 Aug. Pre-service teachers are taught that the funds of knowledge their students bring to school provide intellectual resources to be engaged through productive pedagogies. Teacher education may assist and/or hinder World English Speaking (WES) pre-service teachers in gaining access to the teaching profession by doing likewise. The interpretative case study presented in this paper involves exploring possibilities for teacher education programs to make transnational knowledge connections through WES pre-service teachers. Evidence from interviews with WES pre-service teachers and their Anglophone teacher educators are analysed to elaborate issues confronting teacher education programs involving World English Speakers. The findings indicate that teamwork which is constructed to privilege the knowledge of Anglophone pre-service teachers over their WES peers is questionable. Further, WES pre-service teachers are not only structurally disadvantaged by teamwork practices that privilege local… [Direct]

Alfaro, Cristina; Quezada, Reyes L. (2010). International Teacher Professional Development: Teacher Reflections of Authentic Teaching and Learning Experiences. Teaching Education, v21 n1 p47-59 Mar. The article examines 21 biliteracy teachers who studied and taught in schools through an eight-week in-service professional development program with indigenous children in the state of Altacomulco, Mexico. In the process of documenting their international teaching experiences, a study was conducted to ascertain biliteracy teachers' development of their teaching ideology as a result of their participation and critical reflection, using Spanish as the primary mode of instruction. Five themes are discussed: globally minded teachers; linguistic and culturally relevant curriculum; passionate pedagogy ("amorosidad"); community authentic engagement; and political and ideological clarity…. [Direct]

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