Integrating Indigenous epistemologies into mainstream foreign language teaching

IF 0.9 Q2 LINGUISTICS
Danping Wang
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This study explores teacher perspectives on a government policy that seeks to integrate Indigenous knowledge into mainstream foreign language education in New Zealand schools. Based on in-depth interviews, the study found that language teachers generally support this educational change because trans/languaging involving English and te reo Māori (the Māori language) has become an ordinary practice in their teaching and school lives. However, foreign language teachers expressed a need for discipline-specific materials and professional development to help them integrate mātauranga Māori (Indigenous knowledge of Māori) into their teaching. Their concerns can be understood as a lack of support in interpreting “what,” “how,” and “to what extent” the policy will be implemented. The study suggests using a decolonising approach to help teachers affirm the relevance of Indigenous knowledge in their discipline. It recommends that policymakers adopt a pluriversal stance to ensure that diverse knowledge systems can coexist and interact harmoniously rather than compete with one another in the new National Certificate of Educational Achievement (NCEA) curriculum.
将本土认识论融入主流外语教学
本研究探讨了教师对政府政策的看法,该政策旨在将土著知识融入新西兰学校的主流外语教育。基于深度访谈,研究发现语言教师普遍支持这种教育变革,因为涉及英语和reo Māori (Māori语言)的跨语言已经成为他们教学和学校生活中的一种常见做法。然而,外语教师表示需要特定学科的材料和专业发展,以帮助他们将mātauranga Māori (Māori的本土知识)融入到他们的教学中。他们的担忧可以理解为在解释政策将实施“什么”、“如何”和“到什么程度”方面缺乏支持。该研究建议使用一种非殖民化的方法来帮助教师确认土著知识在其学科中的相关性。它建议政策制定者采取多元立场,以确保不同的知识体系能够共存,和谐地互动,而不是在新的国家教育成就证书(NCEA)课程中相互竞争。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
8.30%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: The Australian Review of Applied Linguistics (ARAL) is the preeminent journal of the Applied Linguistics Association of Australia (ALAA). ARAL is a peer reviewed journal that promotes scholarly discussion and contemporary understandings of language-related matters with a view to impacting on real-world problems and debates. The journal publishes empirical and theoretical research on language/s in educational, professional, institutional and community settings. ARAL welcomes national and international submissions presenting research related to any of the major sub-disciplines of Applied Linguistics as well as transdisciplinary studies. Areas of particular interest include but are not limited to: · Analysis of discourse and interaction · Assessment and evaluation · Bi/multilingualism and bi/multilingual education · Corpus linguistics · Cognitive linguistics · Language, culture and identity · Language maintenance and revitalization · Language planning and policy · Language teaching and learning, including specific languages and TESOL · Pragmatics · Research design and methodology · Second language acquisition · Sociolinguistics · Language and technology · Translating and interpreting.
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