Two worlds apart: Indigenous community perspectives and Non-Indigenous teacher perspectives on Australian schools
Contribuinte(s) |
Pink, William Noblit, George |
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Data(s) |
07/04/2016
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Resumo |
Our evaluation studies of Indigenous school reform begin from a different starting point: listening to, hearing and engaging with the commentaries, voices, narratives and analyses of Indigenous community as they discuss and recount their experiences and current encounters with Australian state schools. Here we undertake a contrastive documentation of the views of Indigenous community members, Elders, parents, education workers, and young people and, indeed, of the views of their non-Indigenous teachers and school principals. This is a dramatic picture of two distinctive cultural lifeworlds, communities and worldviews in contact, of two very different ‘constructions’ by participants of a shared, mutual experience: everyday interaction in the social field of the Australian school. Taken together, our Indigenous and non-Indigenous participants repeatedly confirmed and corroborated a key theme: that Indigenous peoples continue to be viewed and ‘treated’ through the lens and language of cultural, intellectual and moral ‘deficit’. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
Springer |
Relação |
http://eprints.qut.edu.au/94774/3/94774.pdf Phillips, Jay & Luke, Allan (2016) Two worlds apart: Indigenous community perspectives and Non-Indigenous teacher perspectives on Australian schools. In Pink, William & Noblit, George (Eds.) International Handbook of Urban Education [Second Edition]. Springer, New York & London. (In Press) |
Fonte |
Faculty of Education |
Palavras-Chave | #130000 EDUCATION #130100 EDUCATION SYSTEMS #130200 CURRICULUM AND PEDAGOGY #130301 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education #Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education #Indigenous #Community Engagement |
Tipo |
Book Chapter |