澳大利亚偏远土著背景下的心理学研究:走向文化安全的认知研究方法

Pub Date : 2022-08-18 DOI:10.1177/09713336221115553
Melissa R. Freire
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引用次数: 0

摘要

认知心理学研究提供了对人类认知的循证理解。例如,它可以帮助理解语音意识、视觉空间处理和工作记忆如何促进阅读。然而,关于阅读习得的证据基础是从西方、受过教育、工业化、富裕和民主(WEIRD)的视角构建的,很少考虑这些证据是否适用于澳大利亚土著人口。鉴于提高土著儿童读写能力的公认需要,开展认知研究以更好地了解语言、文化或背景如何影响偏远土著社区阅读基础的神经认知过程的发展,具有应用效益。然而,文化认知研究必须以文化公平和文化安全的方式进行。这需要批判和挑战标准的认知研究方法和方法。在这里,我回顾了一项研究,该研究调查了与土著环境中阅读相关的神经认知因素。我强调认知心理学研究与土著习俗和实践之间的脱节,并建议文化安全的认知研究必须嵌入土著的认识、存在和行为方式。我断言,要与土著研究人员作为盟友一起工作,非土著研究人员必须发展跨文化研究技能。这包括建立文化能力和参与批判性的自我反思。
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Psychological Research in an Australian Remote Indigenous Context: Towards a Culturally Safe Cognitive Research Approach
Cognitive psychological research provides an evidence-based understanding of human cognition. For example, it can inform an understanding of how phonological awareness, visuospatial processing and working memory facilitate reading. However, the evidence base around reading acquisition is constructed from a Western, Educated, Industrialised, Rich and Democratic (WEIRD) perspective, with little consideration for whether such evidence extends to Australian Indigenous populations. Given the recognised need to improve literacy outcomes for Indigenous children, there is an applied benefit in conducting cognitive research to better understand how language, culture or context might influence the development of neurocognitive processes underlying reading in remote Indigenous communities. However, it is essential that cultural cognitive research be conducted in a culturally fair and culturally safe manner. This requires critiquing and challenging standard cognitive research approaches and methodologies. Here I reflect on research that investigated neurocognitive factors associated with reading in an Indigenous context. I highlight the disjuncture between cognitive psychological research and Indigenous custom and practice and suggest that culturally safe cognitive research must embed Indigenous ways of knowing, being and doing. I assert that to work alongside Indigenous researchers as allies, non-Indigenous researchers must develop intercultural research skills. This includes building cultural competence and engaging in critical self-reflexivity.
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