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Bibliography: Indigenous Education (Part 418 of 576)

Garbett, Dawn; Ovens, Alan; Thomas, Lynn (2018). Biculturalism 101: A Self-Study Exploring Culturally Responsive Practice. Studying Teacher Education, v14 n3 p308-319. There has been strong advocacy for teacher educators to be culturally responsive in their teaching, but less attention has been focused on the process and journey of becoming more culturally responsive. In this self-study, two teacher educators enrolled in a year-long, foundation-level Maori language course to learn the indigenous language of their country. Putting themselves into roles as students in a bicultural context was a powerful way to learn about Maoritanga and culturally responsive pedagogy, which they then applied in their own teaching. Data were generated through regular reflective journal entries, with significant moments being identified, discussed, and shared with their critical friend. Discussion highlighted that interactions in a bicultural context generated a great deal more than rudimentary language skills. By incorporating aspects of their experiences into their teaching, Dawn and Alan were able to examine the rationale for their actions as an important commitment… [Direct]

Stewart-Ambo, Theresa (2021). "We Can Do Better": University Leaders Speak to Tribal-University Relationships. American Educational Research Journal, v58 n3 p459-491 Jun. Wielding degrees of influence within educational organizations, university leaders are critical in determining how institutions enact their espoused missions and support severely marginalized campus communities. How do universities address and improve educational outcomes for the most severely underrepresented communities? This article presents emergent findings from an illustrative multiple-case study that examined the relationships between two public universities and local American Indian nations in California. As a preliminary step in understanding the present state of "tribal-university relationships," I present findings on university leaders' perceptions and knowledge regarding American Indians broadly and relationships with local Native nations specifically. Using tribal critical race theory as an analytical framework, I posit how colonization, federal recognition, and educational practices affect curricular, political, and economic relationships…. [Direct]

Glover, Crystal; Mize, Min (2021). Supporting Black, Indigenous, and Students of Color in Learning Environments Transformed by COVID-19. International Journal of Multicultural Education, v23 n1 p162-173. This article sheds light on the challenges that Black, Indigenous, and students of color in the U.S. face in dealing with uncertainties and prejudice caused by the worldwide pandemic. It provides recommendations on culturally relevant, responsive, and sustaining teaching strategies based on the cultural competence model (Pedersen, 1994; Sue, 2001; Sue et al., 1992) and curriculum reframing. Teachers of Black, Indigenous, and students of color around the world will find this article particularly useful because there are limited research-based recommendations applicable to schools in the U.S. and around the world…. [PDF]

Raina, Jyoti (2021). Teacher Education for Diversity in India: Socio-Educational Experiences of Travel to a 'Margin'. Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, v19 n2 p370-398 Sep. This paper is a reflective account of a travel that shifted the site of initial elementary teacher education from a metropolitan milieu of New Delhi; to the contrasting locale of a remote mountain region in the central Himalayas. This shift of site aimed to re-locate the concerns of quality schooling, diversity and ecological living to this new context. The possibilities of an emancipatory education for the marginalised children of these remote mountain regions may not emerge from mainstream schooling but are derived from an alternative educational imagination. This alternative educational trajectory is rooted in the children's locale specific bio-physical reality, social ecology and recovery of traditional local knowledge systems. The field experiences at a new site are among the critical dimensions of teacher education for diversity. In comparison to the learning that takes place at an urban location of the initial teacher education programme the insights gained from experiences at… [PDF]

Asrial; Kurniawan, Dwi Agus; Maryono; Nugroho, Putut; Perdana, Rahmat; Syahrial (2019). Ethno-Social Knowledge: How Does Knowledge of Basic School Teachers in Indonesia?. Journal of Education and Learning (EduLearn), v13 n4 p583-588 Nov. Ethno-social is learning that integrates culture and local wisdom into social learning. Indonesia is very rich with a variety of cultures and local wisdom. These cultural values and local wisdom must be used by the teacher as a material and source of learning. So from that, the purpose of this study is to know the ethno-social knowledge of elementary school teachers and the obstacles in applying it. This research uses quantitative design with survey research design. This study used 30 teachers as respondents. The instruments used were questionnaires and interviews. The results of this study are about the knowledge of ethno-social elementary school teachers in Indonesia in good condition. It is known that the ethno-social knowledge of teachers in Bajubang District is 6.7% included in the very bad category. While 30.0% are in a bad category, 43.3% are in a good category and 20.0% are in the very good category. The teacher applies ethno-social knowledge through various methods, learning… [PDF]

Mart√≠nez, Ram√≥n Antonio; Mesinas, Melissa (2019). Linguistic Motherwork in the Zapotec Diaspora: "Zapoteca" Mothers' Perspectives on Indigenous Language Maintenance. Association of Mexican American Educators Journal, v13 n2 p122-144. This article explores Indigenous Mexican mothers' perspectives on multilingualism and Indigenous language maintenance in their children's lives. Drawing on interview data from a larger qualitative study of language and ideology among multilingual children in Los Angeles, California, the article examines the perspectives of four Zapotec mothers who have children in a local public school with a Spanish-English dual language program. The interview data highlight what these women "think" and "do" with respect to the maintenance of the Zapotec language in the lives of their school-aged children. Critical Latinx Indigeneities and the feminist notion of "linguistic motherwork" are used to highlight the intersectional nature of these women's efforts to construct and sustain indigeneity in diaspora…. [Direct]

Jackson-Barret, Elizabeth M.; Lee-Hammond, Libby (2018). Strengthening Identities and Involvement of Aboriginal Children through Learning on Country. Australian Journal of Teacher Education, v43 n6 Article 6 p85-104 Jun. Djarlgarra Koolunger (Canning River kids) is a culturally centred outdoor learning project referred to as 'On Country Learning' or OCL. The project explores Aboriginal connectedness to the spiritual, social, cultural, environmental and geographic dimensions of particular outdoor spaces. This allows Indigenous and non- Indigenous students and their educators to connect at what Nakata (2007) terms the 'cultural interface'. OCL offers opportunities to transform the ways in which schools engage with Aboriginal perspectives whilst facilitating deep learning through what we describe as culturally responsive pedagogies. This paper stories the journey of Aboriginal students and their teachers, engaging in learning that is situated on Country. We examine the involvement of children when learning on Country and provide analysis using the Leuven Involvement Scales (1994). The analysis compares this group of children in a classroom context and an on Country context over a period of six months… [PDF]

Mbah, Marcellus (2019). Can Local Knowledge Make the Difference? Rethinking Universities' Community Engagement and Prospect for Sustainable Community Development. Journal of Environmental Education, v50 n1 p11-22. Against the backdrop of Africa's quest for development, there have been emerging demands for its universities to do more in contributing to development drives beyond their immediate sphere of operation. Drawing on an instrumental case study within an African community, this article heartens a reconsideration of African universities' community engagement as a catalyst for sustainable development. It ascertains that it would be beneficial to the university and its mission to foster sustainable development when local voices are assimilated within its knowledge creation, diffusion, and societal engagement objectives. Although this has the potential to instigate the university's engagement to address local and regional concerns and promote relevant development, this would be predicated on targeted collaborative engagement frameworks, underpinned by mutual trust…. [Direct]

Tafoya, Sonya (2004). Shades of Belonging. Pew Hispanic Center When census takers, pollsters or bureaucrats with application forms ask people to identify their race, most have no problem checking a box that corresponds to one of the five, standard, government-defined racial categories. In the 2000 Census, for example, 90 percent of the U.S. population was counted as either white, black, Asian, American Indian or Pacific Islander. Hispanics are the exception. While a little more than half picked one of the standard categories, some 15 million, 42 percent of the Hispanic population marked \some other race.\ Census 2000 and much other evidence suggests that Hispanics take distinctive views of race, and because their numbers are large and growing fast, these views are likely to change the way the nation manages the fundamental social divide that has characterized American society for 400 years. According to federal policy and accepted social science, Hispanics do not constitute a separate race and can in fact be of any race. The 2000 Census asked… [PDF]

Heto, Prince Paa-Kwesi; Mino, Takako (2020). Educating Humans. Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies in Education, v9 spec iss p33-55. African traditional education and soka approaches to education share a common vision of human education, which is key to transforming the education crisis facing Africa. We make this case in four steps. First, we explore the history of education in Africa to illustrate the roots of the crisis. Second, we introduce soka approaches to education, its history, and fundamental principles. Third, we analyze the convergence of African traditional education and soka approaches to education in terms of their underlying philosophies. Fourth, we investigate possible applications of both philosophies to improve schooling in Africa. The last section outlines how harnessing the insights of both philosophies will engender an African renaissance based on young people striving to live creative and contributive lives…. [PDF]

Cheruvu, Ranita; Templeton, Tran Nguyen (2020). Childhood Innocence for Settler Children: Disrupting Colonialism and Innocence in Early Childhood Curriculum. New Educator, v16 n2 p131-148. This article explores the challenges of rewriting prescriptive early childhood curriculum wherein settler colonialism and childhood innocence as a discourse reinforce one another. We attend to two primary ideas: 1) that the presence of settler colonialism pervades everyday practices in the early years, and 2) early childhood curriculum maintains young children's innocence vis-a-vis the regulation of their knowledge of colonial violence and Indigenous dispossession. By examining the curricular revisions of one pre-service teacher, we highlight the tensions that educators may undergo in negotiating the violence of U.S. settler colonialism within classrooms with young children…. [Direct]

Wiltse, Lynne V. (2016). Filling in the Gaps: Lessons Learned from Preservice Teachers' Partnerships with First Nations Students. in education, v22 n1 p91-109 Spr. In this paper, I report on a school-university collaborative research project that examined ways to merge the out-of-school literacy resources with school literacy practices for First Nations students in a small city in Western Canada. The project involved three interconnected groups of research participants: (a) a teacher researcher study group; (b) students from the participating teachers' classes; (c) preservice teachers who were partnered with the students in literacy partnerships. Grounded in a "funds of knowledge" perspective, and utilizing ethnographic research methods, this qualitative study explored how students' linguistic and cultural resources from home and community networks were utilized to reshape school literacy practices through their involvement in the Heritage Fair Program. This paper focuses on select lessons the preservice teachers learned through their partnerships with the First Nations students. Study findings suggest that the collaboration increased… [PDF]

Kits, Gerda J. (2019). Why Educating for Shalom Requires Decolonization. International Journal of Christianity & Education, v23 n2 p185-203 Jul. Indigenous scholars argue that reconciliation requires educators to make space for Indigenous perspectives in the curriculum. This article agrees, arguing that Christians who are committed to Wolterstorff's (2004) concept of "educating for shalom" must work towards decolonization of the educational system. Eurocentrism in the current system is a product of racism, and prevents students from learning from a diversity of cultural perspectives. Further, failing to decolonize actively perpetuates injustice towards both Indigenous and non-Indigenous students, and fails to equip students to participate in the societal changes that are necessary to heal the relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples in North America…. [Direct]

Maxwell, Jacinta; Salter, Peta (2018). Navigating the "Inter" in Intercultural Education. Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, v39 n1 p15-30. The structure of the Australian national curriculum encompasses engagement with "intercultural education". Significantly, the context from which the curriculum was developed was heavily influenced by a multiculturalist ideology in which notions of cohesion and harmony were dominant. Therefore, those working with the curriculum need to understand the limited ways in which ideas of "diverse" culture might be constructed. As a cultural text this curriculum is a place of encounter between teachers and the various influences on the curriculum document itself. We assert that the perpetuation of ideographs in the context and text of the curriculum, underpin how "intercultural understanding" is positioned in the Australian Curriculum, and limit the narrative possibility of this encounter. It is essential to identify and interrogate such ideographs if we are to be cognisant of the complex politics of national curriculums and opportunities to "re-open"… [Direct]

Fortunato, Michael W. P. (2017). Advancing Educational Diversity: Antifragility, Standardization, Democracy, and a Multitude of Education Options. Cultural Studies of Science Education, v12 n1 p177-187 Mar. This essay is a response to a paper by Avery and Hains that raises questions about the often unintended effects of knowledge standardization in an educational setting. While many K-12 schools are implementing common core standards, and many institutions of higher education are implementing their own standardized educational practices, the question is raised about what is lost in this effort to ensure regularity and consistency in educational outcomes. One such casualty may be local knowledge, which in a rural context includes ancestral knowledge about land, society, and cultural meaning. This essay explores whether or not efforts to standardize crowd out such knowledge, and decrease the diversity of knowledge within our society's complex ecosystem–thus making the ecosystem weaker. Using antifragility as a useful idea for examining system complexity, the essay considers the impact of standardization on innovation, democracy, and the valuation of some forms of knowledge (and its… [Direct]

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Bibliography: Indigenous Education (Part 419 of 576)

Bachewich, Laurie (2017). Aboriginal Perspectives in the Classroom: A Journey to Healing. BU Journal of Graduate Studies in Education, v9 n1 p8-13. Aboriginal perspectives are a very important topic in today's educational system. There is an urgent need for educators to infuse these perspectives in classrooms and school culture, ultimately benefitting communities. However, in doing so, there are several challenges, including how to infuse these perspectives respectfully while embracing the seven teachings of the good life. A variety of resources is available to help educators do this challenging, but rewarding work. Once the educational system as a whole embraces the truth of our Canadian history, faces the challenges, and celebrates diversity, true infusion will happen and the journey to healing will begin…. [PDF]

Rowan, Mary Caroline (2017). Rethinking Relationships with Curriculum by Engaging with Foxes and Sharing Stories in Early Childhood Spaces. Global Studies of Childhood, v7 n2 p131-147 Jun. Nunangat pedagogies concern the adoption of teaching practices informed by relationships with land, water and ice. In this article, the researcher examines an opportunity to disrupt Global North dominance in the Inuit homeland through engagements with fox. Nunangat methodologies require consultations with Elders and hunters especially concerning knowledge that is not accessible via the Internet or at the library. A rhizomatic analysis is used to connect the presentation of the various research narratives and analysis of encounters with fox. These strategies are employed to facilitate occasions to re-conceptualize early childhood practices in ways which enable recognition of the vitality and viability of local Indigenous ways of knowing and being…. [Direct]

Grogan, Leanne; Masters, Jennifer (2018). A Comparative Analysis of Nature Kindergarten Programmes in Australia and New Zealand. International Journal of Early Years Education, v26 n3 p233-248. This paper highlights the similarities and differences of seven nature kindergarten programmes in Australia and New Zealand. The study targeted three programmes from New Zealand and four from Australia. Participant observations and semi-structured interviews were used to build a profile of each site. The profiles were compared on factors such as philosophical influences, curriculum design, site location, safety requirements and programme activity. In many ways, the programmes were quite similar, and this was attributed to synergies between the respective curriculum frameworks and the influence of the European Forest School movement. There were, however, some unique features at each site and differences attributed to national perspectives. It is anticipated that the profiling of philosophical and logistical dimensions of nature programmes implemented in exemplar settings can help to inspire other early childhood educators and encourage them to reposition nature pedagogy as part of… [Direct]

Matapo, Jacoba; Roder, John (2018). Affective Pedagogy, Affective Research, Affect and Becoming Arts-Based-Education-Research(er). Studies in Arts-Based Educational Research What then can the body of Arts — Research — Education do? What can arts based educational research produce (hereafter ABER)? As emerging researchers in this field, we begin this chapter in the middle of a reflective conversation about many assemblages and about our journey into arts based education research, and what life was emergent in a recent project we were involved with known as Move-Act-Play-Sing hereafter as MAPS (Lines, Naughton, Roder, Matapo, Whyte & Liao, 2014). In our conversation we reflect on questions in respect to what ABER might do, how might ABER live within a teacher practitioner early childhood research project. We plug MAPS into the Deleuzean concept of affect to palpate ABER, reveal life and the tensions which express themselves as affects, as capacities to affect and to be affected. We discuss ways to honour more equal power relations across this emerging researcher community in which much is assembles, co-mixing, both affecting and open to being… [Direct]

Mackaway, Jacqueline; Winchester-Seeto, Theresa (2018). Deciding Access to Work-Integrated Learning: Human Resource Professionals as Gatekeepers. International Journal of Work-Integrated Learning, v19 n2 p141-154. Universities, industry and professional bodies advocate work-integrated learning (WIL) as a valuable way to prepare graduates to meet the challenges of contemporary society. When organizations preference particular students over others to host on placement, the full individual and collective potential of WIL is not realized. This paper reports findings from a qualitative study focused on the role played by Human Resource (HR) professionals in influencing student access to WIL placements in Australian organizations. Findings suggest being in a HR role may influence why and how an individual acts as a WIL gatekeeper however, there is an interplay between forces at three distinct levels: organizational, occupational/job and personal, which affect the intentions and actions of the HR professional. Furthermore, the study suggests several conditions are required for an inclusive approach to WIL to be enacted. This study contributes to the underexplored topic of equity and access in WIL…. [PDF]

Kaufman, Carol E.; Keane, Ellen; Mousseau, Alicia C.; Sarche, Michelle; Whitesell, Nancy Rumbaugh (2018). Advancing Scientific Methods in Community and Cultural Context to Promote Health Equity: Lessons from Intervention Outcomes Research with American Indian and Alaska Native Communities. American Journal of Evaluation, v39 n1 p42-57 Mar. Evidence-based interventions hold promise for reducing gaps in health equity across diverse populations, but evidence about effectiveness within these populations lags behind the mainstream, often leaving opportunities to fulfill this promise unrealized. Mismatch between standard intervention outcomes research methods and the cultural and community contexts of populations at greatest risk presents additional challenges in designing and implementing rigorous studies; these challenges too often impede efforts to generate needed evidence. We draw on experiences with American Indian and Alaska Native communities to illustrate how consideration of culture and context can constructively shape intervention research and improve the quality of evidence produced. Case examples from a partnership with one American Indian community highlight opportunities for increasing alignment in intervention development, research design, and study implementation to maximize both validity and feasibility. We… [Direct]

Traxler, John (2018). Learning with Mobiles: The Global South. Research in Comparative and International Education, v13 n1 p152-175 Mar. This article addresses the need to build sustainable, appropriate and authentic foundations for learning with mobiles in the Global South. It does this in two ways: first, by reviewing aspects of the current environment, namely the nature of learning with mobiles in the Global North, the relationships between research and policy in relation to learning with mobiles, the impact of mobile technology on language, and the meanings of international development; and second, by consolidating these within a broader and critical historical framework that sees education and technology as the instruments of the hegemony of the Global North, reinforcing its values and worldview. This is, however, methodologically challenging and problematic, and the article briefly considers how such arguments should be constructed. The article concludes by offering ways forward as the basis for practical progress…. [Direct]

Mirfakhraie, Amir (2018). Discursive Formations of Indigenous Peoples in Iranian School Textbooks: Racist Constructions of the Other. Journal of Curriculum Studies, v50 n6 p754-771. Despite a rich tradition of investigating how 'Oriental' and Middle Eastern colonized others are represented in Western and Eurocentric media, policy papers, curriculum and popular culture, an important issue that has not been adequately explored by scholars of Iranian studies is how Iranian curricula writers have constructed images of Western and non-Western marginalized others in their school textbooks. How do Iranian educators construct the relationship between the 'revolutionary' Iranian self and Indigenous others in the Americas? How does the curriculum reflect on Indigenous peoples and represent their histories? What are the discursive formations that inform the constructions of Indigenous cultures and nations in Iranian school textbooks? In this paper, I deconstruct the dominant public pedagogies that inform the official knowledge about Indigenous peoples in Iranian curricula for Grades One through Nine…. [Direct]

Anthony, Glenda; Hunter, Jodie; Hunter, Roberta; McChesney, Katrina (2018). Developing Mathematical Inquiry Communities: Enacting Culturally Responsive, Culturally Sustaining, Ambitious Mathematics Teaching. set: Research Information for Teachers, n2 p25-32. There is increasing recognition that the underachievement of Maori, Pasifika, and other diverse students in New Zealand schools is in large part owing to systemic factors that disadvantage these students. Responding to the urgent need for significant change in our schools and classrooms, the developing mathematical inquiry communities model is a research-based approach to mathematics teaching involving culturally responsive and culturally sustaining pedagogical practices that reflect ambitious teaching and complex instruction. The approach is comprehensive and complex, involving a set of interrelated components and practices aimed at improving teaching, learning, equity, and student outcomes. Although transforming pedagogical practices is challenging, such transformation is essential to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved for all students…. [Direct]

Beltman, Susan; Papatraianou, Lisa H.; Schuberg Barnes, Emma; Strangeways, Al (2018). Beginning Teacher Resilience in Remote Australia: A Place-Based Perspective. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, v24 n8 p893-914. Enhancing resilience is key to reducing teacher attrition and addressing the challenges of the profession but scant research exists on resilience in regional and remote settings, where there is a shortage of quality, specialist and lead teachers. The aim of this study was to combine ecological and relational perspectives on resilience to examine pre-service and early career teacher resilience in the remote context of central Australia. The findings suggest that beginning teacher resilience in central Australia involves a particular set of enablers and constraints which are characterised by teachers' capacity to build connections to place, connections as a learner and connections in relationships. A transactional systems model is presented that articulates the dynamism of the resilience processes and offers a way to better understand the ecological interdependencies unique to a particular context and culture. This understanding will enable teachers, initial teacher educators, school… [Direct]

(2018). How Are We Doing? Children "and" Youth in Government Care "and" Youth on Youth Agreements. British Columbia Ministry of Education In October 2017, the Representative for Children and Youth (RCY) publicly released "Room for Improvement: Toward Better Education Outcomes for Children Care." The report focused on discrepancies in educational outcomes for children in government care compared to all children and made six recommendations to the ministries of Education and Children and Family Development. This report addresses one of those six recommendations: to publicly report on educational outcomes of children and youth in government care, by September 2018. This report focuses on students who have come into government care (CYIC), including those on a Continuing Custody Order (CCO), youth agreement (YAG), interim and temporary custody orders, special needs or voluntary care agreements, and children under custody orders from another province or jurisdiction. This report uses a Non-CYIC cohort as a reference point for the educational outcomes of children and youth in care. This cohort is not the same as a… [PDF]

Pardo, Astrid N√∫√±ez (2020). Inquiring into the Coloniality of Knowledge, Power, and Being in EFL Textbooks. HOW, v27 n2 p113-133 Jul-Dec. This article inquires into the coloniality present in EFL textbooks, which continue being used as the core resource for language learning and teaching in Colombia. However, its instrumentalization, imperialism, and exploitation as an instrument of subalternation suggest that EFL textbooks produced by foreign and local publishing houses in the Colombian context are colonised in three interrelated dimensions: knowledge, power, and being. Therefore, this research proposal aims at unveiling the ontological, epistemological, and power criteria rooted in critical interculturality as a decolonial alternative, and inspired by the decolonial turn, to orient the development of other contextualised materials from the voices of Colombian teachers, authors and experts… [PDF]

Stuart, Margaret (2020). Being Professional in New Zealand Early Childhood Education: A Genealogy. Policy Futures in Education, v18 n5 p597-609 Jun. An academic, Peter Dinniss, discussed the then emerging issue of professionalism in the early childhood education sector in 1974. "There has been much debate over the term ['professional'] together with discussion as to whether teaching is a profession" (1974: 11). On the cusp of the 21st century, the Education Council (now renamed Teaching Council) of New Zealand consulted with teachers on their register about a professional code. This article follows the emergence of the professionalism discourse. I examine traces of the 'strategies, tactics and procedures' in a genealogy of the managerial technicist process of education. My interest lies in emergent 'responsibilization' of teachers over the period. I examine the power/knowledge of the 'profession' in Aotearoa, New Zealand, as teachers invent and govern themselves. I ask if the Council's discourse of professionalism through registration of individuals can be re-envisioned through the collective and democratic practices… [Direct]

Bulenzibuto Tamubula, Irene; Miiro, Richard; Okry, Florent; Sseguya, Haroon (2020). Participation or Legitimisation? Assessment of Quality of Participation in Farmer Learning Video Production in Central Uganda. Journal of Agricultural Education and Extension, v26 n3 p253-268. Purpose: This study assessed the quality of participation in farmer learning video (FLV) production by examining opportunities for actors' participation and the extent of incorporation of their interests. Design/methodology/approach: A qualitative case study research design was used through focus group discussions and interviews held with 5 key informants and 19 farmers involved in the production of 2 videos. We used the quality of participation analytical framework for analysis. Findings: Actors in FLV production were largely selected basing on interests and expertise in carrying out assigned tasks. The extent of actor participation in FLV production varied. Video experts made major decisions on video content and allocation of tasks while field officers and farmers largely participated in the filming stage. The incorporation of farmers' interests was curtailed by their limited participation in planning for FLV production. Further, farmers and field officers perceived that inadequate… [Direct]

Funk, Johanna; Guthadjaka, Kathy (2020). Indigenous Authorship on Open and Digital Platforms: Social Justice Processes and Potential. Journal of Interactive Media in Education, v2020 n1 Article 6. Online digital platforms can increase access to educational opportunities for marginalised students, authors and communities, but digital platform design can further marginalise Indigenous knowledge because such platforms are structured according to western epistemological assumptions. They do not accommodate for Indigenous or alternative knowledge frameworks. In addition, the premium placed on openness by certain platforms and licenses contradicts the approaches preferred by Indigenous knowledge authorities who tie the sharing of some types of knowledge to the identity and authority level of the intended audience. Knowledge in this context is not understood as discrete units of information that can be abstracted from their communities, easily shared on public platforms, but rather as sensitive materials that can only be shared by recognized knowledge authorities for specific purposes. The processes by which Indigenous knowledge authorities engage with knowledge sharing on digital… [PDF]

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