This paper critically examines dominant discourses informing First Year Experience programs delivered for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students participating in higher education. We interrogate traditional ‘deficit models’ through the recognition and acknowledgement of Indigenous knowledge at the cultural interface, the arena in which Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students encounter university for the first time.\ud \ud In this paper, we demonstrate how the First Year Experience programs for Indigenous students, developed and delivered by the Oodgeroo Unit, are conceptualised by Indigenous knowledges. By recognising Indigenous knowledges and experiences, and valuing these within the Western academy, we provide an alternat...
Indigenous students, particularly those from regional and remote areas, are under-represented in bot...
‘First know your students’, is a well-known saying in teaching. But do Australian universities reall...
Drawing on interviews with current and past Indigenous undergraduate students at the University of Q...
This paper critically examines dominant discourses informing First Year Experience programs delivere...
This paper critically examines dominant discourses informing First Year Experience programs delivere...
Embedding Indigenous knowledge in the curriculum continues to challenge traditional western perspect...
This paper reports findings from a recent study of Australian Aboriginal higher education student ex...
Embedding Indigenous knowledge in the curriculum continues to challenge traditional western perspect...
Indigenous Australians participate in higher education at a rate significantly less than non- Indige...
Abstract There remains significant under representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander pe...
Students from minority and non-dominant backgrounds often have negative experiences when dealing wit...
Educational processes directed at Indigenous peoples have long propagated a disparity between the e...
Educational processes directed at Indigenous peoples have long propagated a disparity between the ed...
Indigenous students, particularly those from regional and remote areas, are under-represented in bot...
Embedding Indigenous knowledge in the curriculum continues to challenge traditional western perspect...
Indigenous students, particularly those from regional and remote areas, are under-represented in bot...
‘First know your students’, is a well-known saying in teaching. But do Australian universities reall...
Drawing on interviews with current and past Indigenous undergraduate students at the University of Q...
This paper critically examines dominant discourses informing First Year Experience programs delivere...
This paper critically examines dominant discourses informing First Year Experience programs delivere...
Embedding Indigenous knowledge in the curriculum continues to challenge traditional western perspect...
This paper reports findings from a recent study of Australian Aboriginal higher education student ex...
Embedding Indigenous knowledge in the curriculum continues to challenge traditional western perspect...
Indigenous Australians participate in higher education at a rate significantly less than non- Indige...
Abstract There remains significant under representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander pe...
Students from minority and non-dominant backgrounds often have negative experiences when dealing wit...
Educational processes directed at Indigenous peoples have long propagated a disparity between the e...
Educational processes directed at Indigenous peoples have long propagated a disparity between the ed...
Indigenous students, particularly those from regional and remote areas, are under-represented in bot...
Embedding Indigenous knowledge in the curriculum continues to challenge traditional western perspect...
Indigenous students, particularly those from regional and remote areas, are under-represented in bot...
‘First know your students’, is a well-known saying in teaching. But do Australian universities reall...
Drawing on interviews with current and past Indigenous undergraduate students at the University of Q...