初任教师培训中的非殖民实践:澳大利亚语境。

IF 2.2 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
Frontiers in Sociology Pub Date : 2025-07-02 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fsoc.2025.1561532
Aleryk Fricker
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在大约7万年的时间里,在澳大利亚大陆上,第一民族(First Nations)的人们普遍使用织布。织布作为一种交流的过程,旨在支持人与人、国家、祖先、精神和超越人类的领域之间的真实和关系联系。在最近的学术研究中,在西方背景下,纱线编织的过程已经成为一种收集丰富定性数据的合法研究方法。人们还发现,它能够支持社会联系、合作、处理和分享创伤。本文通过对民族志的反思,探讨了澳大利亚教师培训初期的教学过程中协作编故事作为一种教学过程,以及将编故事作为一种教学过程如何挑战一个多世纪以来主导澳大利亚高等教育的新殖民主义教学法。本文发现,在高等教育中加入编故事可以为减少新殖民主义暴力提供一个重要的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Yarning as decolonial praxis in initial teacher training: an Australian context.

Yarning has been a widespread practice for First Nations people across the Australian continent for approximately 70,000 years. Yarning as a process of communication has been designed to support authentic and relational connections between people, Country, ancestors, spirits, and the more-than-human realms. In recent scholarship, the process of yarning has emerged in a western context as being a legitimate research method for gathering rich qualitative data. It has also been found to be able to support social connections, collaborations, and processing and sharing trauma. This paper explores collaborative yarning as a pedagogical process in initial teacher training in Australia through auto-ethnographic reflections, and how engaging with yarning as a pedagogical process can challenge the neo-colonial pedagogies that have dominated higher education in Australia for over a century. This paper has found that when engaging with yarning in Higher Education, it can provide an important opportunity to reduce the neo-colonial violence present.

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来源期刊
Frontiers in Sociology
Frontiers in Sociology Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
4.00%
发文量
198
审稿时长
14 weeks
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