Although there is a substantial literature critical of the colonising discourses of higher education in both teaching and learning and research, there has been relatively little commentary about work integrated learning (WIL) from an Indigenous perspective. Currently, the higher education discourse of WIL is dominated by a teaching and learning perspective, which focuses almost entirely on the benefits to the student and/or the educational institution. This leaves the Indigenous community experience invisible and continues to reinforce a neo-colonial relationship between higher education providers and Indigenous people. This article reports the findings of a study undertaken in partnership with the Aboriginal community of Cherbourg in Queen...
Indigenous Australians participate in higher education at a rate significantly less than non- Indige...
Service learning is described as a socially just educational process that develops two-way learning ...
There is clear evidence that Indigenous education has changed considerably over time. Indigenous Aus...
Engagement of tertiary institutions with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities can take ...
Australian universities have demonstrated heightened investment in the concept of work-integrated le...
In the past university work with Indigenous Australians has been generally framed from a service mod...
‘First know your students’, is a well-known saying in teaching. But do Australian universities reall...
Indigenous students, particularly those from regional and remote areas, are under-represented in bot...
There has been much attention paid to university-community engagement generally and, in particular, ...
Indigenous students, particularly those from regional and remote areas, are under-represented in bot...
Educational processes directed at Indigenous peoples have long propagated a disparity between the e...
Geographical and social isolation have often been linked to the ‘success’, or rather ‘non-success’, ...
This paper critically examines dominant discourses informing First Year Experience programs delivere...
Indigenous students, particularly those from regional and remote areas, are under-represented in bot...
Educational processes directed at Indigenous peoples have long propagated a disparity between the ed...
Indigenous Australians participate in higher education at a rate significantly less than non- Indige...
Service learning is described as a socially just educational process that develops two-way learning ...
There is clear evidence that Indigenous education has changed considerably over time. Indigenous Aus...
Engagement of tertiary institutions with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities can take ...
Australian universities have demonstrated heightened investment in the concept of work-integrated le...
In the past university work with Indigenous Australians has been generally framed from a service mod...
‘First know your students’, is a well-known saying in teaching. But do Australian universities reall...
Indigenous students, particularly those from regional and remote areas, are under-represented in bot...
There has been much attention paid to university-community engagement generally and, in particular, ...
Indigenous students, particularly those from regional and remote areas, are under-represented in bot...
Educational processes directed at Indigenous peoples have long propagated a disparity between the e...
Geographical and social isolation have often been linked to the ‘success’, or rather ‘non-success’, ...
This paper critically examines dominant discourses informing First Year Experience programs delivere...
Indigenous students, particularly those from regional and remote areas, are under-represented in bot...
Educational processes directed at Indigenous peoples have long propagated a disparity between the ed...
Indigenous Australians participate in higher education at a rate significantly less than non- Indige...
Service learning is described as a socially just educational process that develops two-way learning ...
There is clear evidence that Indigenous education has changed considerably over time. Indigenous Aus...