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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 14 results
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Nakata, Martin; Nakata, Vicky; Keech, Sarah; Bolt, Reuben – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2014
The challenges of finding more productive ways of teaching and learning in Australian Indigenous Studies have been a key focal point for the Australian Indigenous Studies Learning and Teaching Network. This article contributes to this discussion by drawing attention to new possibilities for teaching and learning practices amid the priority being…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Majors (Students), Teacher Education, Teaching Methods
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Higgins, Marc – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2014
Photovoice, the most prevalent participatory visual research methodology utilised within social science research, has begun making its way into Indigenous contexts in light of its critical and pedagogical potential. However, this potential is not always actualised as the assumptions that undergird photovoice are often the same ones that…
Descriptors: Photography, Research Methodology, Social Science Research, Indigenous Populations
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Osborne, Sam; Guenther, John – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2013
This article sets the scene for the series of five articles on "red dirt thinking". It first introduces the idea behind red dirt thinking as opposed to "blue sky thinking". Both accept that there are any number of creative and expansive solutions and possibilities to identified challenges--in this case, the challenge of…
Descriptors: Educational Improvement, Rural Areas, Foreign Countries, Pacific Islanders
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Bennet, Maria; Lancaster, Julie – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2012
This article explores second year pre-service teachers' ability to work with Indigenous students and their families during a small-scale project conducted in an Indigenous community. Supported field placements offered the pre-service teachers valuable opportunities to engage with the teaching of reading to Indigenous students "on their turf".…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Reading Instruction, Teaching Methods, Reading Improvement
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Exley, Beryl – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2010
This paper critiques a 2008 Queensland Studies Authority (QSA) assessment initiative known as Queensland Comparable Assessment Tasks, or QCATs. The rhetoric is that these centrally devised assessment tasks will provide information about how well students can apply what they know, understand and can do in different contexts (QSA, 2009). The QCATs…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Performance Based Assessment, Language Tests, English
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O'Brien, Karen – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2008
This paper explores the prescriptive, distancing and separating qualities that exist in Western systems of knowledge production. It examines scientific language and how discrimination takes place in the university setting and explores the ways in which academic knowledge production affects the learning experiences, participation and completion…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Educational Objectives, Outcomes of Education, Learning Strategies
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Nakata, Martin – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2007
For a while now I have been researching and writing about Australian Indigenous education issues. Like you all, I have seen much good work and learnt much from what is going on across the country and internationally to improve outcomes for Indigenous learners in formal education processes. And still we go on with the struggle and with the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Foreign Countries
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Nymo, Randi – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2007
Colonialism has had significant bodily impacts on Indigenous peoples through medicine. Excluded from the German race, Sami have been burdened by mainstream prejudices which perpetuate myths about Sami having poor genetic material and, as a consequence, having an inferior culture and language. This offensive burden and subsequent humiliation has…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Indigenous Populations, Phenomenology, Social Bias
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Adermann, Jenny; Campbell, Marilyn – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2007
Excessive anxiety and worry can prevent young people from participating fully in school and life opportunities. Anxiety can involve fear of being apart from significant people or being left alone; avoidance of certain situations or activities for fear of embarrassment; worrying about normal life issues; repetitive thoughts and behaviours used as…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Suicide, Adolescents, Fear
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de Plevitz, Loretta – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2006
Recent reports on Indigenous education have revealed that high proportions of students have been placed in special classes for intellectual disability or behaviour disorders. This is not an isolated phenomenon. Indigenous students in Canada and Romani children in Europe are also disproportionately represented in special schooling. This paper asks…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Racial Segregation, Mental Retardation, Special Classes
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Burridge, Nina – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2006
This paper draws on findings from a major research project conducted between 1998 and 2000 on meanings of reconciliation in the school education sector. Using data collected from surveys and drawing from the community context in which schools exist, it explores and analyses meanings of reconciliation within school communities when the discourse of…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Indigenous Populations, Community Attitudes, Educational Change
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Restoule, Jean-Paul – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2005
This paper relates findings from learning circles held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, with urban Aboriginal men. The purpose of the circles was to determine how an Aboriginal cultural identity is formed in urban spaces. Education settings were mentioned by the research participants as a significant contribution to their cultural identity…
Descriptors: Teaching Styles, Indigenous Populations, Course Content, Foreign Countries
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
Walker, Polly – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2001
Spiritual experience is a taboo topic within Western institutions of higher learning. The silencing of this integral aspect of Indigenous people's lives often results in research findings that are inaccurate, incomplete, and invalid. Indigenous scholars are speaking out about how they integrate their spirituality into formal academic research,…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Ethnocentrism, Hegemony, Higher Education