This article highlights the perceptions and expectations of knowledge that many people, including educators and policy makers, take for granted. Our focus of understanding is Indigenous studies and gender studies. Our aim is to show how modern education undermines these fields of studies. We use an autoethnographic method, reflecting more than 75 years as pupils/students and more than 90 years as educators. We have carefully chosen narratives of exposure to knowledge outside the educational system, as well as narratives of limitations posed upon us by the educational system. This narrative approach makes it possible for us to investigate and discuss our grief about areas of knowledge that society cries for, but the educational system contin...
© 2011 Sophie RudolphThis thesis examines Indigenous school education in Australia, through analysin...
This paper discusses the importance of education in the\ud lives of Indigenous Australian women. Emp...
Identifying as non-Indigenous, we are often left considering our positionality and identity in Indig...
This article highlights the perceptions and expectations of knowledge that many people, including ed...
This article highlights the perceptions and expectations of knowledge that many people, including ed...
This article highlights the perceptions and expectations of knowledge that many people, including ed...
It is the aim of this article to provoke debate and encourage greater scrutiny regarding the use and...
In contemporary educational research, practice and policy, ‘indigenous women’ have emerged as an imp...
Although the manifestation of what is taken to be indigenous knowledge could presumably be traced ba...
This article draws from autoethnography and historical analysis to examine how racialized people pur...
The lack of Indigenous cultural knowledge and perspectives in the school curriculum has been identif...
The educational attainment of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students is often presented with...
Comprend des références bibliographiquesIndigenous and decolonizing perspectives on education have l...
The core issue of achieving educational equality for Indigenous Australian students is examined thro...
There has been a persistent contest among contemporary scholars over what is considered legitimate k...
© 2011 Sophie RudolphThis thesis examines Indigenous school education in Australia, through analysin...
This paper discusses the importance of education in the\ud lives of Indigenous Australian women. Emp...
Identifying as non-Indigenous, we are often left considering our positionality and identity in Indig...
This article highlights the perceptions and expectations of knowledge that many people, including ed...
This article highlights the perceptions and expectations of knowledge that many people, including ed...
This article highlights the perceptions and expectations of knowledge that many people, including ed...
It is the aim of this article to provoke debate and encourage greater scrutiny regarding the use and...
In contemporary educational research, practice and policy, ‘indigenous women’ have emerged as an imp...
Although the manifestation of what is taken to be indigenous knowledge could presumably be traced ba...
This article draws from autoethnography and historical analysis to examine how racialized people pur...
The lack of Indigenous cultural knowledge and perspectives in the school curriculum has been identif...
The educational attainment of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students is often presented with...
Comprend des références bibliographiquesIndigenous and decolonizing perspectives on education have l...
The core issue of achieving educational equality for Indigenous Australian students is examined thro...
There has been a persistent contest among contemporary scholars over what is considered legitimate k...
© 2011 Sophie RudolphThis thesis examines Indigenous school education in Australia, through analysin...
This paper discusses the importance of education in the\ud lives of Indigenous Australian women. Emp...
Identifying as non-Indigenous, we are often left considering our positionality and identity in Indig...