Two Worlds Apart: Indigenous Community Perspectives and Non-Indigenous Teacher Perspectives on Australian Schools
Autor: | Allan Luke, Jay Phillips |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Community engagement
business.industry media_common.quotation_subject 05 social sciences 050301 education Gender studies Indigenous Politics Scholarship State (polity) Critical theory Medicine 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Narrative business 0503 education Decolonization 050104 developmental & child psychology media_common |
Zdroj: | Second International Handbook of Urban Education ISBN: 9783319403151 |
DOI: | 10.1007/978-3-319-40317-5_52 |
Popis: | There are well-trodden paths we could follow to introduce international readers of this Handbook to the education of Australia’s Indigenous peoples: Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders. We could start from a genocidal history of invasion, incarceration, residential schooling, forced labor, political and economic marginalisation. We could review current analyses of the effects of this history on traditional lands, Indigenous health, cultural and linguistic sustainability, economic and political participation, and education – noting the performance ‘gaps’ in schools on all conventional measures (Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations 2012). We could begin from scholarship on Indigenous epistemologies and Aboriginal knowledge (e.g., Nakata 2008; Martin 2009), Indigenous re-appropriation of critical theory (Moreton-Robinson 2008), and powerful pan-Indigenous models of decolonisation (e.g., Smith 2012). However, this evaluation study of Indigenous school reform in Australia proceeds from lead us to a different starting point: listening to, hearing and engaging with the commentaries, voices, narratives and analyses of Indigenous community as they discuss and recount their experiences and current encounters with Australian state schools. Here we undertake a contrastive documentation of the views of Indigenous community members, Elders, parents, education workers, and young people and, indeed, of the views of their non-Indigenous teachers and school principals. This is a dramatic picture of two distinctive cultural lifeworlds, communities and worldviews in contact, of two very different ‘constructions’ by participants of a shared, mutual experience: everyday interaction in the social field of the Australian school. Taken together, our Indigenous and non-Indigenous participants repeatedly confirmed and corroborated a key theme: that Indigenous peoples continue to be viewed and ‘treated’ through the lens and language of cultural, intellectual and moral ‘deficit’. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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