Table des matières

Expanding the Indigenous Education Agenda
A Foreword
LINDA TUHIWAI SMITH

Opening
Contested Spaces and Expanding the Indigenous Education Agenda
SANDRA STYRES, DAWN ZINGA, SPENCER LILLEY & HUIA TOMLINS-JAHNKE

I Vision / Theoretical Approaches to Indigenous Education

1 Education Through Paideia
The Contested Space of the Indigenous Psyche
MARGARET J. MAAKA

2 Pathways for Remembering and (Re)cognizing Indigenous Thought
in Education
Indigenizing Teacher Education and the Academy
SANDRA STYRES

3 Kaupapa Māori within the Academy
Negotiating Sites of Struggle
LEONIE PIHAMA

4 Contested Spaces
Indigeneity and Epistemologies of Ignorance
HUIA TOMLINS-JAHNKE

5 Homo Economicus and Forgetful Curriculum
Remembering Other Ways to Be a Human Being
DWAYNE DONALD

II Relationships / Negotiating Contested Spaces

6 Contested Places in Education
The Radical Potential for “Being Māori”
WALLY PENETITO

7 He Pelapela anei ka ‘Ōlelo a ka Hawai‘i?
Contested Values in Language Revitalization
K. LAIANA WONG & SAM L. NO‘EAU WARNER

8 Wisdom Maps
Metaphors as Maps
KATRINA-ANN R. KAPA‘ANAOKALAOKEOLA NAKOA OLIVEIRA

9 What’s in a Name?
Contested Eponyms
SPENCER LILLEY

10 Contested Spaces of Indigenization in Canadian Higher Education
Reciprocal Relationships and Institutional Responsibilities
MICHELLE PIDGEON

III Knowledge / Practice and Pedagogy

11 Confronting Indigenous Identities in Transcultural Contexts
FRANK DEER

12 Preparing Teachers for Indigenous Language
Immersion Classrooms
MARGIE HOHEPA & NGAREWA HAWERA

13 Teaching as the Creation of Ethical Space
Indigenous Student Learning in the Academy/University
DAWN ZINGA

14 Exploring Teacher Candidate Resistance to Indigenous Content
in a Teacher Education Program
JEAN-PAUL RESTOULE & ANGELA NARDOZI

15 Kia Mahi Hei Waewae Mo Te Atawhai
MARI ROPATA-TE HEI

IV Action / New Directions in Indigenous Education

16 Improving Special Needs Education for Māori Children
Concepts, Principles, and a Promising Program
JILL BEVAN-BROWN

17 Maintaining Indigeneity within Education and Broader Contexts
WIREMU DOHERTY

18 Essentially Māori
A Māori Art Paradigm
ROBERT JAHNKE

19 Indigenous Knowledge Systems as the Missing Link
in Scientific Worldviews
A Discussion on Western Science as a Contested Space
DANIEL LIPE

20 Is “Space” the Final Frontier?
Talking Forward Indigenous Frameworks in Education
PATRICIA MARINGI G. JOHNSTON

Closing
Drawing the Threads of Contested Spaces
SPENCER LILLEY, HUIA TOMLINS-JAHNKE, SANDRA STYRES & DAWN ZINGA

Contributors

La description

For Indigenous students and teachers alike, formal teaching and learning occurs in contested places. Here, leading scholars in contemporary Indigenous education from North America, New Zealand, and Hawaii disentangle aspects of colonialism from education to advance alternative philosophies of instruction. From multiple disciplines, contributors explore Indigenous education from theoretical and applied perspectives. Part of a growing body of research, this is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand the contested spaces of contemporary education.

Reviews

"Indigenous Education is . .. foundational. The collected chapters cover a broad range of experiences, education levels, and expertise, which makes it more practical for a general audience. This book would be a useful starting place for Indigenous educators looking for solidarity and inspiration for making changes to the systems in place. .. [This] book would be just as useful for a non-Native reader. .."

- Noah Patton

"Indigenous Education documents the uphill battle against stand-pat public schooling. Anyone who stepped foot in a classroom as student or parent will find common ground with these eloquent critics. ... Indigenous Education is compelling and frankly infuriating, but don’t take the editors’ word for it. Read your child’s textbook for yourself. "

- Holly Doan

"Indigenous Education...is a timely and comprehensive text that allows the reader to explore the expanses of education through Native academic voices."

- Eōmailani Kukahiko, Native American and Indigenous Studies, Fall 2021