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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing all 15 results
Auld, Glenn – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2002
In a remote Aboriginal Australian (Kunibidji) community, three touch-screen computers containing 96 Ndjebbana-language talking books were made available to children in informal settings. The computers' popularity is explained by the touch screens' form and the talking books' intertextual and hybrid nature. The Kunibidji are transforming their…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Australian Aboriginal Languages, Children, Computer Terminals
Shnukal, Anna – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2002
Imposition of English in Torres Strait and Cape York Peninsula (Australia) schools led to the development of Torres Strait Creole (TSC), now widely spoken. Common formal errors that TSC-speaking students make in written English are described and related to linguistic transfer. Cultural vocabulary, core cultural values reflected in TSC, and the…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Creoles, Cultural Awareness, English (Second Language)
Appleyard, Susan – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2002
A case study of Aboriginal education in Geraldton, Western Australia, looked at the cycle of low educational attainment, unemployment, and poverty; national and state programs to support Aboriginal students and parent involvement; and community attitudes toward existing programs and proposed improvement strategies. A 1-year plan is detailed for…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Case Studies, Community Attitudes, Community Involvement
Taylor, Pauline – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2002
The Indigenous Education and Training Alliance (IETA) is a staff college of Education Queensland (Australia), which brokers and delivers teacher professional development around state policies on Indigenous education. IETA's work to support policy on literacy education and English language learning for Indigenous students focuses on development of…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Educational Policy, English (Second Language), Foreign Countries
Dwyer, Stuart – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2002
In Northern Territory (Australia), a small, remote, rural school serving Aboriginal students increased parent and community involvement, resulting in improved student achievement. Community members helped to develop culturally relevant, bilingual materials, drawing on financial support from the national Aboriginal Student Support and Parental…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Community Involvement, Culturally Relevant Education, Educational Improvement
Howard, Damien – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2002
Fifty-two Indigenous adults in Northern Territory (Australia) who were returning to education reflected on their earlier experiences in school and on factors that contributed to their motivation to stay in school or drop out early. Factors included family support and family problems, influence of friends, problems with other students, and good and…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Academic Persistence, Adult Students, Dropouts
Stewart, Jan – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2002
A review of research suggests that the idea of cultural differences in "learning styles" may be used to marginalize and alienate Indigenous students in mainstream educational settings. An awareness of cultural influences can be used more appropriately to further the effectiveness of communication in the classroom and among all educational…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Cognitive Style
Leonard, Simon – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2002
An Australian researcher exploring the underlying assumptions held by non-Aboriginal educators involved in Aboriginal education reexamined his first childhood history book, "Australia from the Beginning" (Pownall, 1980). Although a liberal and sympathetic treatment, the book reflected non-Aboriginal assumptions about assimilation as "success" and…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Acculturation, Beliefs, Childhood Attitudes
Dunbar-Hall, Peter – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2001
Music educators with little experience in Aboriginal culture have trouble teaching Aboriginal music in schools. Indigenous music activity in the Kimberley region of Western Australia illustrates four contexts in which Indigenous music could be studied: local versus national Indigenous music, and Indigenous music in relation to history, place, and…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Cultural Maintenance, Educational Strategies, Foreign Countries
Mackinlay, Elizabeth – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2001
A college course in Queensland (Australia) brings Indigenous women into the class to teach their music and dance. Performative pedagogy involves students as audience and participants, providing opportunities to critically engage with the social, political, and ethical dimensions of power and knowledge in the university setting. Student comments…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, College Programs, Consciousness Raising, Cultural Awareness
Magowan, Fiona – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2001
The Yolngu people of Australia's Northern Territory trace their lineage through places in the land and water. Movements of currents represent movements of clans over time. Patterns of sound and design are associated with particular groups and with body parts. These essences are conveyed in ritual songs that are crucial ways of knowing oneself and…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Anthropology, Foreign Countries, Genealogy
Patten, Herb; Ryan, Robin – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2001
When the Australian government's Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation terminated at the end of 2000, a people's foundation took up the work. A knowledge of Australian Aboriginal history would foster the respect necessary for reconciliation. Research can help by implementing emerging canons in which Aboriginal perspectives provide the framework…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Action Research, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Awareness
Mackinlay, Elizabeth – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2001
A White Australian professor of a class on Indigenous women's dance has her Aboriginal sister-in-law conduct workshops on Indigenous dance. The classroom dynamics resulting from the complex power relationships (teacher as White woman, Aboriginal family member, and students) disturbs Western paradigms. The responsibility of "safely delivering"…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Classroom Environment, Consciousness Raising, Dance Education
Semchison, Michael Red Shirt – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2001
A 56-year-old Canada Native took a college course on Australian Indigenous approaches to knowledge. He observed that initially many students were hindered by their past experience with linear paradigms of structured academic processes. Eventually they let their minds access spirit and feeling in addition to thought, allowing a recall of life…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Canada Natives, Cognitive Style, College Students
Sheehan, Norm; Walker, Polly – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2001
The Purga Elders Centre in Queensland (Australia) is an Aboriginal-owned meeting place where Aboriginal culture and history are lived and passed on. Research conducted there is based on Indigenous Knowledge Research (IKR), which is grounded in Indigenous realities and approaches knowledge only through respect for Indigenous epistemologies. Twenty…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Action Research, Cultural Education, Cultural Maintenance