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Showing 1 to 15 of 284 results
Craven, Rhonda G.; Yeung, Alexander Seeshing; Han, Feifei – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2014
The study investigated the impact of professional development (PD) in Indigenous teaching on teachers' psychological and behavioural aspects, and Indigenous students' learning engagement. Adopting a multiple-indicator-multiple-indicator-cause model, frequency of PD was found to have positive paths to teachers' self-concept in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Behavior, Indigenous Populations, Learner Engagement
Gladman, Justin; Perkins, David – Health Education Journal, 2013
Context and Objective: Australian rural general practitioners (GPs) require public health knowledge. This study explored the suitability of teaching complex public health issues related to Aboriginal health by way of a hybrid problem-based learning (PBL) model within an intensive training retreat for GP registrars, when numerous trainees have no…
Descriptors: Problem Based Learning, Foreign Countries, Physicians, Rural Areas
Burgess, Cathie – Australian Association for Research in Education (NJ1), 2012
This study explores the role of agency in early career Aboriginal teachers expressions of their professional identity. It argues that in the context of teaching, opportunities to exercise personal agency are critical to the development and maintenance of a "healthy" professional identity, particularly for those traditionally disempowered…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, Role Perception, Beginning Teachers, Interviews
Localization of Open Educational Resources (OER) in Nepal: Strategies of Himalayan Knowledge-Workers
Ivins, Tiffany Zenith – ProQuest LLC, 2011
This dissertation examines localization of Open Educational Resources (OER) in Himalayan community technology centers of Nepal. Specifically, I examine strategies and practices that local knowledge-workers utilize in order to localize educational content for the disparate needs, interests, and ability-levels of learners in rural villages. This…
Descriptors: Rural Population, Indigenous Knowledge, Focus Groups, Ethnography
Cortina, Jose Luis – Mathematics Education Research Journal, 2013
Results from a project conducted in Mexico are discussed, in which a group of 17 indigenous teachers analyzed the numeration systems of their first language. The main goal of the project is to develop resources that help teachers in supporting students' understanding of the systems. In the first phase of the project, the central organizing ideas…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Program Descriptions, Number Concepts, Numbers
Saunders, Anne – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2012
Worldwide there are critical shortfalls of teachers, particularly in Indigenous communities. This article considers the use of nonformal education (NFE) in the form of community-based adult education (CBAE) for Indigenous teacher training to meet this need. Drawing on a literature search of Indigenous CBAE initiatives, some of the challenges and…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Adult Education, Empowerment, Nonformal Education
Walker, David; Tennant, Marc; Short, Stephanie D. – Health Education Journal, 2011
Objective: This research was undertaken to explore factors operating at the level of the clinic and the community which influence the development of the oral health role of Indigenous Health Workers. The research is a significant aspect of a wider study of the disconnect between the strong national policy support for the development of the oral…
Descriptors: Health Personnel, Public Health, Dental Health, Interviews
Kitchen, Julian; Cherubini, Lorenzo; Trudeau, Lyn; Hodson, Janie – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2010
Teacher education is critical to the development of Aboriginal teachers able to ensure success among Aboriginal learners and contribute to the preservation and renewal of Aboriginal communities. In a series of talking circles, six beginning Aboriginal teachers discussed their teacher preparation and their first years of practice. They expressed…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Teacher Effectiveness, Indigenous Populations, Teaching Methods
Cherubini, Lorenzo; Niemczyk, Ewelina; Hodson, John; McGean, Sarah – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2010
The stress and anxiety of new teachers is a pervasive problem that impacts upon teacher preparation and retention. Although new mainstream teacher concerns and experiences have been readily discussed in the literature, the same attention has not been invested for new Aboriginal teachers. In Ontario, Canada, in excess of 60% of the Aboriginal…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Teaching Experience
Hodge, David R.; Roby, Jini L. – Social Work, 2010
From a global perspective, the typical person living with HIV/AIDS is likely a sub-Saharan African woman. Yet despite calls from NASW to adopt a global outlook on the HIV/AIDS crisis, little research has examined how such women cope. In this study, the authors used a mixed-methods approach to explore how one sample of sub-Saharan African women (N…
Descriptors: Females, Global Approach, Coping, Religious Factors
Innes, Robert Alexander – American Indian Quarterly, 2009
In this article, the author presses the virtues of insider research, suggesting that Native American studies might profit from a deeper engagement with the broader debates that have taken place in other disciplines and fields. Insider research, he suggests, can generate questions not available to those with outsider perspectives. Participating in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, American Indian Studies, American Indians, American Indian Education
McCallum, Mary Jane Logan – American Indian Quarterly, 2009
This article was originally a response to a call from the Western History Association for papers by Indigenous academics. The call aimed to showcase Indigenous scholarship on certain terms: that it delves into some of the opportunities, challenges, and obstacles involved with "working from home" or doing research that bridges a space called "home"…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, American Indian History, Scholarship, Historians
Fixico, Donald L. – American Indian Quarterly, 2009
If the typical premise of American Indian history is actually the history of Indian-white relations, then the "other" side of the coin must be turned over for understanding an Indian point of view and what is called "writing from home." Conceptually, "writing from home" is the challenge of historians who are American Indian and who write history…
Descriptors: American Indian History, Oral Tradition, American Indians, Historians
Smith, Nick L. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2008
In contrast with nonindigenous workers, to what extent do unique ethical problems arise when indigenous field-workers participate in field studies? Three aspects of study design and operation are considered: data integrity issues, risk issues, and protection issues. Although many of the data quality issues that arise with the use of indigenous…
Descriptors: Field Studies, Confidentiality, Integrity, Ethics
Alexander, Leslie B.; Richman, Kenneth A. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2008
This article addresses ethical dilemmas experienced by street-level research and evaluation workers recruiting and gathering data in community-based research projects. The authors focus on a subgroup of street-level research workers, whom they call research extenders (REs), employed because they share important characteristics with the target…
Descriptors: Focus Groups, Indigenous Personnel, Indigenous Knowledge, Research Problems

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