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Showing 1 to 15 of 67 results Save | Export
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Anderson, Leticia; Riley, Lynette – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2021
The shift to massified higher education has resulted in surges in the recruitment of staff and students from more diverse backgrounds, without ensuring the necessary concomitant changes in institutional and pedagogical cultures. Providing a genuinely inclusive and 'safer' higher education experience in this context requires a paradigm shift in our…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Multicultural Education, Teaching Methods
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Bishop, Michelle; Vass, Greg – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2021
Culturally responsive approaches to schooling (CRS) aim to address pervasive inequities that exist in education. More specifically, CRS practices seek to improve the experiences and academic achievements of marginalised and minoritised learners, such as those from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds. In this paper, we consider the…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Faculty Development
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Sanga, Kabini; Reynolds, Martyn; Houma, Stanley; Maebuta, Jack – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2021
Tok stori is a Melanesian form of dialogical engagement. Although it has been generally associated with informal activities, this article points to the potential of tok stori as a pedagogical or teaching process. Set in a school leadership programme spread across the Solomon Islands, the discussion illustrates the value of approaching the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Pacific Islanders, Teaching Methods
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Connor, Helene; Napan, Ksenija – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2021
Campfire sessions are springing up at conferences and educational institutes as an alternative to PowerPoint presentation workshops. As an educational tool, the campfire session is presented as innovative pedagogy, yet sitting around an open fire, telling stories, talking and 'yarning' has long been practised in Indigenous societies. This paper…
Descriptors: Pacific Islanders, Ethnic Groups, Story Telling, Teaching Methods
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Frazer, Baressa; Yunkaporta, Tyson – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2021
This paper explores the possibilities of designing a Wik pedagogy, drawing on the language and culture of the remote community of Aurukun on Cape York. The research was inspired by the emergence of Aboriginal pedagogy theory in recent decades, along with a resurgence of interest in cognitive linguistics indicating an undeniable link between…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Educational Practices
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Kerpan, Serene; Humbert, M. Louise; Abonyi, Sylvia – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2021
The focus of this article is understanding the perceptions that Canadian Indigenous teachers and students have on a novel physical activity teaching method that is utilised in the classroom. We explore the role that physical activity plays in the healthy growth and development of children, with special attention to Indigenous children. Through…
Descriptors: Canada Natives, Teacher Attitudes, Student Attitudes, Movement Education
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Taeao, Sinapi; Averill, Robin – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2021
Improving educational outcomes for Pasifika learners is a national priority in New Zealand. Long-standing mathematics achievement differences between Pasifika and non-Pasifika indicate that looking beyond usual pedagogies may be essential for enhancing Pasifika student learning. Culturally sustaining pedagogy, drawing from the cultural experiences…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Pacific Islanders, Mathematics Instruction, Culturally Relevant Education
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Drummond, Ali – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2020
In the era of Indigenising the academy, health disciplines like nursing are required to teach Indigenous peoples' health, history and culture in their undergraduate programmes in order to meet national accreditation standards. This inclusion of Indigenous peoples' perspectives within nursing education towards registration thus qualifies respective…
Descriptors: Nursing Education, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Undergraduate Students
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Sarra, Chris; Spillman, David; Jackson, Cathy; Davis, John; Bray, John – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2020
Enacting high expectations for all students in the classroom is a complex undertaking. Underlying, out-of-awareness assumptions may lead to actions, behaviours or pedagogic choices that do not support these high expectations beliefs and intentions. For Indigenous education, this is compounded by public and professional discourses around deficit…
Descriptors: Expectation, Teacher Expectations of Students, Teaching Methods, Decision Making
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Hill, Barbara; Tulloch, Marian; Mlcek, Susan; Lewis, Melinda – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2020
This paper explores the impact of self-reflective processes of staff at Charles Sturt University (CSU) while undertaking an online Indigenous Cultural Competency Program (ICCP). The ICCP was designed for completion by all university staff to enhance their knowledge and understanding of Indigenous cultures, histories and contemporary realities.…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Universities, Indigenous Populations, Metacognition
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Ryder, Courtney; Mackean, Tamara; Ullah, Shahid; Burton, Heather; Halls, Heather; McDermott, Dennis; Edmondson, Wendy – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2019
Socially accountable health curricula, designed to decrease Aboriginal health inequities through the transformation of health professional students into culturally safe practitioners, has become a focal point for health professional programmes. Despite this inclusion in health curricula there remains the question of how to best assess students in…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Health Personnel, Indigenous Populations, Social Differences
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Griffin, Lynn; Griffin, Steven; Trudgett, Michelle – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2018
Cinema is an art form widely recognised as an agent to change the social condition and alter traditional norms. Movies can be used to educate and transform society's collective conscience. Indigenous Australian artists utilise the power of artistic expression as a tool to initiate change in the attitudes and perceptions of the broader Australian…
Descriptors: Films, Indigenous Populations, Change Agents, Social Change
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Clague, Liesa; Harrison, Neil; Stewart, Katherine; Atkinson, Caroline – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2018
School-based gardens (SBGs) are contributing to improvements in many areas of education, including nutrition, health, connectedness and engagement of students. While considerable research has been conducted in other parts of the world, research in Australia provides limited understanding of the impact of SBGs. The aim of this paper is to give a…
Descriptors: Gardening, Reflection, Research, Indigenous Populations
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Andersen, Clair; Edwards, Ann; Wolfe, Brigette – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2017
"Riawunna" is an Aboriginal word meaning "a place of learning" for Aboriginal people, from entry level to tertiary studies, at the University of Tasmania (UTAS) and operates on Hobart, Launceston and Burnie campuses. The Riawunna Centre was established to encourage Aboriginal people to aspire to higher levels of education, and…
Descriptors: Imagery, Indigenous Populations, Academic Aspiration, Pacific Islanders
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Spillman, David – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2017
The global standardization reform movement in education has seduced many Indigenous education policy makers in Australia, providing a powerful neoliberal discourse to further consolidate their focus on Indigenous educational defcit. "A Share in the Future", the latest review of Indigenous education in the Northern Territory is an…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Educational Policy, Futures (of Society), Program Descriptions
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