Indigenous Schooling in the Modern World: Education, Knowledge and Liberation for All Citizens: Education, Culture, and Society, cartea 3
Autor Neil Hooley, Oksana Razoumova, Lois Peeleren Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 sep 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004505407
ISBN-10: 9004505407
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Education, Culture, and Society
ISBN-10: 9004505407
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Education, Culture, and Society
Notă biografică
Neil Hooley is an Honorary Fellow in the College of Arts and Education, Victoria University, Melbourne and is an experienced academic and researcher. Within a pragmatist and inquiry paradigm, he has expertise with qualitative methodologies including narrative inquiry, case writing and case study and action research.
Oksana Razoumova is a lecturer in the College of Arts and Education, Victoria University, Melbourne. As a linguist, she has had extensive teaching and research experience regarding the nature of language teaching and learning and its application in educational, employment and community settings.
Lois Peeler is Principal at Worawa Aboriginal College, Healesville, Victoria. Her career includes having spent many years in the state and federal public service, including the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission and at the community level, advancing the cause of the Indigenous community and in particular, education.
Oksana Razoumova is a lecturer in the College of Arts and Education, Victoria University, Melbourne. As a linguist, she has had extensive teaching and research experience regarding the nature of language teaching and learning and its application in educational, employment and community settings.
Lois Peeler is Principal at Worawa Aboriginal College, Healesville, Victoria. Her career includes having spent many years in the state and federal public service, including the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission and at the community level, advancing the cause of the Indigenous community and in particular, education.
Recenzii
"Overall, this book is a challenge to many of the normative assumptions about curriculum, pedagogy and identity that frequently sideline, marginalise and ‘other’ Indigenous peoples. This is a book that will be of value to any teacher who cares about making a difference and wants to see what other people have achieved. (…) There are clear lessons for those working in the field of ‘Indigenous education in the modern world’ but there are also lessons to support ‘education, knowledge and liberation for all citizens of the world’." - Meg Maguire, in: Journal of Education Policy, 2021
Cuprins
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Figures and Tables
About the Authors
Terminology
1 Global Trends and the Struggle for Indigeneity
1 What It Means to Be Indigenous
2 Decolonising Education and Knowledge
3 Identity within Neoliberalism
4 Living between Worlds
5 Sovereignty and Self-Determination
6 Prospects for Indigenisation
7 Diversity and Harmony in Our Time
8 Uluru Statement from the Heart
9 Excursus 1: Sand and Sky
2 Case Study: Worawa Aboriginal College
1 Living and Learning Together
2 Commitment to Education, Culture, Language and Wellbeing
3 Community-Based Expansion of Student Leadership Development Opportunities
4 Culture Curriculum, Contemporary and Traditional
5 Curriculum, a Holistic Experience
6 Bringing Peoples and Ideas Together
7 Indigenous Knowledge as Cultural Practice
8 Knowledge Exemplars – Two-way Inquiry Learning
9 Excursus 2: Indigenous Science, or Not
3 Experience through the Arts
1 Picasso and Namatjira
2 School Education and the Arts
3 Praxis Philosophy of Arts
4 Excursus 3: Tower Hill
4 Redefining School Mathematics as Philosophy of Practice
1 Indigenous Approaches to School Mathematics
2 Ethnomathematics, a Cultural View of Mathematics
3 Wittgenstein and the Foundations of Mathematics
4 Excursus 4: Rock Pools
5 Language Connections with the World
1 Formations of Society, Language, Thought
2 Perspective of Indigenous Language
3 Language of Visual Thought and Expression
4 Reflective Interlude
5 Excursus 5: A Process of Eyes Opened Wide
6 Education as Philosophy of Pragmatism and Practice
1 Coming to Practice
2 Background to Pragmatism and Pragmatists
3 Practice, Praxis and Signature Pedagogies
4 Discursive Curriculum
5 Excursus 6: Meaning in Engines
7 Citizen Education
1 Education as Philosophy of Practice
2 Assessment, the ‘Hard Question’ of Education
3 Citizen Knowledge, Truth and Freedom
4 Excursus 7: International Friendship
8 The Invincible Spirit, Defining the Future
References
Index
Acknowledgements
List of Figures and Tables
About the Authors
Terminology
1 Global Trends and the Struggle for Indigeneity
1 What It Means to Be Indigenous
2 Decolonising Education and Knowledge
3 Identity within Neoliberalism
4 Living between Worlds
5 Sovereignty and Self-Determination
6 Prospects for Indigenisation
7 Diversity and Harmony in Our Time
8 Uluru Statement from the Heart
9 Excursus 1: Sand and Sky
2 Case Study: Worawa Aboriginal College
1 Living and Learning Together
2 Commitment to Education, Culture, Language and Wellbeing
3 Community-Based Expansion of Student Leadership Development Opportunities
4 Culture Curriculum, Contemporary and Traditional
5 Curriculum, a Holistic Experience
6 Bringing Peoples and Ideas Together
7 Indigenous Knowledge as Cultural Practice
8 Knowledge Exemplars – Two-way Inquiry Learning
9 Excursus 2: Indigenous Science, or Not
3 Experience through the Arts
1 Picasso and Namatjira
2 School Education and the Arts
3 Praxis Philosophy of Arts
4 Excursus 3: Tower Hill
4 Redefining School Mathematics as Philosophy of Practice
1 Indigenous Approaches to School Mathematics
2 Ethnomathematics, a Cultural View of Mathematics
3 Wittgenstein and the Foundations of Mathematics
4 Excursus 4: Rock Pools
5 Language Connections with the World
1 Formations of Society, Language, Thought
2 Perspective of Indigenous Language
3 Language of Visual Thought and Expression
4 Reflective Interlude
5 Excursus 5: A Process of Eyes Opened Wide
6 Education as Philosophy of Pragmatism and Practice
1 Coming to Practice
2 Background to Pragmatism and Pragmatists
3 Practice, Praxis and Signature Pedagogies
4 Discursive Curriculum
5 Excursus 6: Meaning in Engines
7 Citizen Education
1 Education as Philosophy of Practice
2 Assessment, the ‘Hard Question’ of Education
3 Citizen Knowledge, Truth and Freedom
4 Excursus 7: International Friendship
8 The Invincible Spirit, Defining the Future
References
Index