Unsettling the urban–rural dichotomy for Indigenous education and education for reconciliation

Q1 Social Sciences
E. Kim, Eric Layman
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT The urban/rural dichotomy used in framing Indigenous educational issues is becoming increasingly untenable and deserving of scrutiny. Indigenous urban education follows initiatives derived from rural areas with the assumption that rural Indigenous education programs are pure or authentic. Without a critical examination of power relations, the flow of people and knowledge in the Indigenous curriculum development process may lead to continued disrespect, appropriation, and tokenization of Indigenous knowledges. This article challenges the conventional conceptualizations surrounding the rural/urban Indigenous educational divide. In so doing, the authors explore two cases: The Saskatchewan (Canada) Ministry of Education’s official K-12 science curriculum attempts to integrate Indigenous perspectives, as do Taiwan’s Indigenous experimental schools. The finding suggests moving beyond pan-urban/rural paradigms that are stemming from settler colonialism. Acknowledging the important role partnerships play for Indigenous education policy and program development, the authors put forth Crit-Trans Partnership Framework to analyze these two cases.
原住民教育与和解教育的城乡二元对立
在制定土著教育问题时使用的城市/农村二分法正变得越来越站不住脚,值得仔细审查。土著城市教育遵循来自农村地区的倡议,并假设农村土著教育计划是纯粹或真实的。如果没有对权力关系的批判性审视,原住民课程开发过程中的人员和知识流动可能会导致对原住民知识的持续不尊重、挪用和标记化。这篇文章挑战了围绕农村/城市土著教育鸿沟的传统观念。在此过程中,作者探讨了两个案例:加拿大萨斯喀彻温省教育部的官方K-12科学课程试图整合土著观点,台湾的土著实验学校也是如此。这一发现建议超越源于定居者殖民主义的泛城市/农村范式。认识到伙伴关系对土著教育政策和项目发展的重要作用,作者提出了批判-跨伙伴关系框架来分析这两个案例。
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来源期刊
Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education
Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
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