Michele Tanaka’s book, Learning and Teaching Together: Weaving Indigenous Ways of Knowing Into Education, documents and contemplates the pedagogical effects of a unique course, Earth Fibres, designed by Lorna Williams, and guided by Indigenous elders, to immerse student teachers at the University of Victoria into Indigenous ways of knowing, by having them work with traditional Indigenous fabric and textile arts. In her book, Tanaka repeats the key questions of the course: How do you get out of your head? How do you get back into your heart? In the course, the students do this in the context of a culture that destabilizes their normative understandings of the world and of teaching, learning and the curriculum. The book uses the framework of ...
Reviews of four books: 1 Out of our minds: learning to be creative by Ken Robinson; 2 The future of ...
Inspiration and Innovation in Teaching and Teacher Education is an edited book by Karen Goodnough, G...
In 1990, Marilyn Cochrane-Smith and Susan Lytle argued that What is missing from the knowledge base...
Michele Tanaka’s book, Learning and Teaching Together: Weaving Indigenous Ways of Knowing Into Educa...
As an emerging Indigenous scholar completing a mainstream doctoral program, I was immediately drawn ...
Jackie Seidel and David Jardine’s book Ecological Pedagogy, Buddhist Pedagogy, Hermeneutic Pedagogy:...
Four Arrows’ new book, according to his Wikipedia page, is his 22nd book. Prolific in his life work ...
As an emerging Indigenous scholar completing a mainstream doctoral program, I was immediately drawn ...
Book review of: Holistic education and embodied learning, edited by John P. Miller and Kelli Nigh, C...
There are fundamental differences between the various ontologies of Australian First Nations peoples...
Excerpt: One of the tangible benefits of the increased attention given to teaching and learning in r...
Responding to increased emphasis in the classroom and the field on exposing students to diverse epis...
This text comprises a book review of Visioning a Mi’kmaw Humanities: Indigenizing the Academy edited...
This is an excellent book about an issue of importance for the future of cities in the Canadian prai...
Review of: Ka’m-t’em: A Journey Toward Healing. Kishan Lara-Cooper and Walter J. Lara Sr. Temecula, ...
Reviews of four books: 1 Out of our minds: learning to be creative by Ken Robinson; 2 The future of ...
Inspiration and Innovation in Teaching and Teacher Education is an edited book by Karen Goodnough, G...
In 1990, Marilyn Cochrane-Smith and Susan Lytle argued that What is missing from the knowledge base...
Michele Tanaka’s book, Learning and Teaching Together: Weaving Indigenous Ways of Knowing Into Educa...
As an emerging Indigenous scholar completing a mainstream doctoral program, I was immediately drawn ...
Jackie Seidel and David Jardine’s book Ecological Pedagogy, Buddhist Pedagogy, Hermeneutic Pedagogy:...
Four Arrows’ new book, according to his Wikipedia page, is his 22nd book. Prolific in his life work ...
As an emerging Indigenous scholar completing a mainstream doctoral program, I was immediately drawn ...
Book review of: Holistic education and embodied learning, edited by John P. Miller and Kelli Nigh, C...
There are fundamental differences between the various ontologies of Australian First Nations peoples...
Excerpt: One of the tangible benefits of the increased attention given to teaching and learning in r...
Responding to increased emphasis in the classroom and the field on exposing students to diverse epis...
This text comprises a book review of Visioning a Mi’kmaw Humanities: Indigenizing the Academy edited...
This is an excellent book about an issue of importance for the future of cities in the Canadian prai...
Review of: Ka’m-t’em: A Journey Toward Healing. Kishan Lara-Cooper and Walter J. Lara Sr. Temecula, ...
Reviews of four books: 1 Out of our minds: learning to be creative by Ken Robinson; 2 The future of ...
Inspiration and Innovation in Teaching and Teacher Education is an edited book by Karen Goodnough, G...
In 1990, Marilyn Cochrane-Smith and Susan Lytle argued that What is missing from the knowledge base...