Shame is a \u27slippery\u27 concept in educational contexts but by listening to Aboriginal philosophy and Country, we can rethink its slipperiness. This article contemplates how multiple understandings of shame are derived from and coexist within colonised educational contexts. We focus on one positive example of Indigenous education to consider how these understandings can be challenged and transformed for the benefit of Indigenous learners. We discuss a mentoring program run by and for Indigenous young people that is successfully impacting school retention and completion rates: The Australian Indigenous Mentoring Experience (AIME). AIME has a rule, \u27No Shame at AIME\u27, with the view to minimising shame as a barrier to engaging with W...
Access to a ‘good’ education is often argued as deserving of the highest priority. The available res...
It is the aim of this article to provoke debate and encourage greater scrutiny regarding the use and...
In her recent work, Sara Ahmed explores wilfulness as a negative charge made by some against others,...
Shame is a \u27slippery\u27 concept in educational contexts but by listening to Aboriginal philosoph...
This paper draws on “reintegrative shame” (engaging the offender(s) in discussions of the moral dime...
This paper explores the tenuous relationship between Indigenous perspectives and educational institu...
This article explores the unique mentoring model that the Australian Indigenous Mentoring Experience...
This paper explores the tenuous relationship between Indigenous perspectives and educational institu...
This article explores the unique mentoring model that the Australian Indigenous Mentoring Experience...
This article explores the unique mentoring model that the Australian Indigenous Mentoring Experience...
This article explores the unique mentoring model that the Australian Indigenous Mentoring Experience...
Access to a ‘good’ education is often argued as deserving of the highest priority. The available res...
This volume combines empirical research-based and theoretical perspectives on shame in cultural cont...
This chapter contributes to the examination of inclusion and diversity in this Handbook by critiquin...
Whilst some improvements to Indigenous education outcomes have occurred in recent years, there remai...
Access to a ‘good’ education is often argued as deserving of the highest priority. The available res...
It is the aim of this article to provoke debate and encourage greater scrutiny regarding the use and...
In her recent work, Sara Ahmed explores wilfulness as a negative charge made by some against others,...
Shame is a \u27slippery\u27 concept in educational contexts but by listening to Aboriginal philosoph...
This paper draws on “reintegrative shame” (engaging the offender(s) in discussions of the moral dime...
This paper explores the tenuous relationship between Indigenous perspectives and educational institu...
This article explores the unique mentoring model that the Australian Indigenous Mentoring Experience...
This paper explores the tenuous relationship between Indigenous perspectives and educational institu...
This article explores the unique mentoring model that the Australian Indigenous Mentoring Experience...
This article explores the unique mentoring model that the Australian Indigenous Mentoring Experience...
This article explores the unique mentoring model that the Australian Indigenous Mentoring Experience...
Access to a ‘good’ education is often argued as deserving of the highest priority. The available res...
This volume combines empirical research-based and theoretical perspectives on shame in cultural cont...
This chapter contributes to the examination of inclusion and diversity in this Handbook by critiquin...
Whilst some improvements to Indigenous education outcomes have occurred in recent years, there remai...
Access to a ‘good’ education is often argued as deserving of the highest priority. The available res...
It is the aim of this article to provoke debate and encourage greater scrutiny regarding the use and...
In her recent work, Sara Ahmed explores wilfulness as a negative charge made by some against others,...