This article draws from autoethnography and historical analysis to examine how racialized people pursue educational justice, consent, inclusion, and enjoyment through non-hegemonic learning. A historical analysis of U.S. colonial education systems imposed upon Diné and Philippine peoples grounds a comparative study on two forms of anti-colonial pedagogy: Indigenous education and critical unschooling. These two lines of inquiry underpin autoethnographic analyses of our own experiences in non-hegemonic learning to offer direct insights into the process of experiential, and decolonial growth intimated in relational learning environments. Indigenous education and critical unschooling literature both affirm the notion that all learners are alway...
This article argues that decolonizing educational research begins in attention to inherited col...
This article highlights the perceptions and expectations of knowledge that many people, including ed...
Colonialism is a significant problem that impacts how Indigenous (and all) students engage with lear...
American schooling and Indigenous peoples share a coarse relationship mired by devastating periods o...
Comprend des références bibliographiquesIndigenous and decolonizing perspectives on education have l...
This paper outlines the theoretical, pedagogical, and philosophical framework for critical unschooli...
In the context of settler colonialism in the US, mainstream education practices function as ongoing ...
This multi-modal dissertation examines the historical hegemonic making of U.S. education, and how co...
This article provides an introduction to the two articles in this Special Theme on education, labour...
This article explores how Indigenous students make meaning of the dominant structure of settler colo...
This article focuses on pedagogical talking circles as a practice of decolonizing and Indigenizing e...
In this article, I analyze, evaluate, and problematize the structure of settler colonialism and demo...
Power brokers and their market economies enforce education on a global level. According to the Unite...
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 argues that decolonizing educational research begins in attention to inherited col...
This article highlights the perceptions and expectations of knowledge that many people, including ed...
Colonialism is a significant problem that impacts how Indigenous (and all) students engage with lear...
American schooling and Indigenous peoples share a coarse relationship mired by devastating periods o...
Comprend des références bibliographiquesIndigenous and decolonizing perspectives on education have l...
This paper outlines the theoretical, pedagogical, and philosophical framework for critical unschooli...
In the context of settler colonialism in the US, mainstream education practices function as ongoing ...
This multi-modal dissertation examines the historical hegemonic making of U.S. education, and how co...
This article provides an introduction to the two articles in this Special Theme on education, labour...
This article explores how Indigenous students make meaning of the dominant structure of settler colo...
This article focuses on pedagogical talking circles as a practice of decolonizing and Indigenizing e...
In this article, I analyze, evaluate, and problematize the structure of settler colonialism and demo...
Power brokers and their market economies enforce education on a global level. According to the Unite...
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 argues that decolonizing educational research begins in attention to inherited col...
This article highlights the perceptions and expectations of knowledge that many people, including ed...
Colonialism is a significant problem that impacts how Indigenous (and all) students engage with lear...