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Showing 46 to 60 of 171 results Save | Export
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Makalela, Leketi – Classroom Discourse, 2019
Increasing international mobility has raised awareness on the fluidity and porous nature of boundaries not only between nation states, but also between named languages. Despite the complexities of overlaps across a wider spectrum of languages and classrooms worldwide, orthodox education programmes still reflect monolingual and epistemic biases,…
Descriptors: African Culture, Classroom Communication, Code Switching (Language), Foreign Countries
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Brock-Utne, Birgit – International Review of Education, 2016
This article discusses the concept "ubuntu", an African worldview rooted in the communal character of African life. Some of the same thinking can, however, be found in various Eurasian and Latin-American philosophies. The concept "ubuntu" is also used in language planning: here, the question of language of instruction is…
Descriptors: Language of Instruction, African Culture, Language Planning, Educational Policy
Shedia R. Laguer – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Black faculty and staff are often expected to engage in university service their White peers are not (Reddick et al., 2021). More specifically, Hirschfield and Joseph (2012) found that faculty of color are expected to bear the responsibility of diversity-related work in ways their White counterparts are not. The term 'cultural taxation' was…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Professional Personnel, School Personnel, Females
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Ursin, Marit; Langfeldt, Camila Caldeira; Lyså, Ida Marie – Global Studies of Childhood, 2022
In this article, we draw on a case study where the Norwegian Child Welfare services placed an ethnic minority girl, Amara, into foster care. Her sensemaking around being moved into foster care is used as entry point to explore tensions between Amara, her family, and Child Welfare services. Amara's responsibilities within the family conflict with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Welfare, Minority Group Children, Foster Care
Jorgensen, Robyn; Graven, Mellony – Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia, 2022
In this paper we reflect on our combined work in some of the most marginalised educational contexts in the Southern Hemisphere. We draw on the work of Bourdieu to frame the paper. We propose the working in marginalised education settings requires a particular habitus or way of being to be able to play the research game. Underpinning our approach…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged, Social Capital, Cultural Capital, African Culture
Sr. Dwayne D. Jones – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This dissertation explores the experiences of first-generation, Black male college students in a predominantly white, urban commuter institution in the United States. It focuses on understanding their challenges and developing strategies to enhance their connection to the educational environment of a university. The central research question…
Descriptors: African American Students, Males, Urban Universities, Commuter Colleges
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Crandall, Bryan Ripley – English in Texas, 2016
Begun as a formative experiment, the Connecticut Writing Project at Fairfield University offers Young Adult Literacy Labs for youth to write, including Ubuntu Academy--a program for immigrant and refugee students. This article highlights a public commitment to Ubuntu, a sense of community and human relations, while reflecting on what became…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Refugees, Summer Programs, Literacy Education
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Scully-Russ, Ellen; Cseh, Maria; Hakimi, Lily; Philip, Jerry; Lundgren, Henriette; Ralston, D. J. – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2022
At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, some US workers became "essential" overnight and were, therefore, ineligible to work from home. Millions of these workers put their lives at risk to keep society functioning. So, why do we undervalue those we cannot live without? This article explores the transformative potential of learning in and…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Transformative Learning, Labor Force Development
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Itenge, Helvi; Muashekele, Chris; Chamunorwa, Michael Bosomefi; Winschiers-Theophilus, Heike; Brereton, Margot; Soro, Alessandro – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2022
Namibia, a southern African country with an Ubuntu culture that emphasizes interrelations, generally displays a low reading culture. In this study, we explored a social approach to reading to engage Namibian primary learners. Inspired by promising reading approaches, such as shared group reading enhanced by embodied actions, we created Spin Da…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Reading Instruction, Foreign Countries, African Culture
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VerCetty, Quentin – Journal of Museum Education, 2022
In the twenty-first century, museum learning has shifted with the world's social climate, exploring new approaches to engage the public with collections. This text reframes the museum art educator as an activator and how they can utilize concepts within Afrofuturism to decolonize hegemonic white cultural institutions and Eurocentric epistemes.…
Descriptors: Museums, Art Education, Art Teachers, Postcolonialism
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Koen, M.; Neethling, M.; Esterhuizen, S.; Taylor, B. – Perspectives in Education, 2021
Early childhood care and education (ECCE) has gained recognition as an important means of promoting the holistic development of the inseparable social, emotional, cognitive and physical facets of education in the early childhood years. Since early childhood development poses challenges to many young children, the prolonged mandatory closure of…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, School Closing, Holistic Approach
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Wu, Jinting; Eaton, Paul William; Robinson-Morris, David W.; Wallace, Maria F. G.; Han, Shaofei – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2018
Recognizing cognitive imperialism in the emerging postqualitative regime, we propose a hesitation, a perturbation to think the other-than-ness of the west. Asserting the postqualitative regime as west reinforces hegemonic epistemological violence; we look to the East and Africa--progenitors of the west-termed postqualitative regime and seek to…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Religion, Epistemology, African Culture
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Mashoko, Dominic – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2022
This article considers science teaching and learning as may be understood through the integration of indigenous artefacts into physics curriculum in Zimbabwean schools. It comments significance of and elaborates on the issues raised in Nadaraj Govender and Edson Mudzamiri's paper entitled: Incorporating indigenous artefacts in developing an…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Science Instruction, Science Curriculum, Physics
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Versfeld, Jessica; Graham, Marien Alet; Ebersöhn, Liesel – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2023
This study applies an Afrocentric theory (Relationship-Resourced Resilience [RRR]) to analyze teacher resilience in a less-researched context in the Global South. The Isithebe-intervention study in South African schools investigated how time together to strengthen relationships promotes teacher resilience despite structural disparities. Teachers…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Theories, Teachers, Resilience (Psychology)
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Bekele, Teklu Abate; Amponsah, Samuel; Karkouti, Ibrahim M. – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2023
Due partly to the multimodal and multiscalar nature of technology applications, there lacks theories to explain successful technology integration in teaching and learning in higher education. Such multidisciplinary theories developed primarily within Western contexts as behaviourism, cognitivism, constructivism, connectivism, collaborationism,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Philosophy, Technology Integration, Higher Education
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