For this post I wanted to share a resource for educators to support the indigenization of their programs, classrooms, and pedagogical practices. BC Campus is an online resource that aims to support the evolution of education across the province through collaboration, communication and innovation. One of their resources for this is their Indigenization project. The goal of this project is to offer open resources to educators to support the incorporation of Indigenous epistemologies into their practice, systematically decolonizing post-secondary education. Some of these resources include:
Learn about Indigenous histories in Canada:
- Actions for teaching: Engage and collaborate with Indigenous peoples, knowledges, and cultures in your course design and curriculum.
- Sign up to take Indigenous Canada, a Massive Open Online Course from the University of Alberta.
- Read: Indigenous History Month Reading List from Massey Books
- Indigenous Ally Toolkit, compiled by Dakota Swiftwolfe and others from the Montreal Indigenous Community Network
Learn about decolonizing your course materials and teaching practices:
- Actions for teaching: Learn and integrate First Peoples Principles of Learning into your work as a designer and facilitator of learning experiences for all students.
- The BCcampus Pulling Together Indigenization guides include a foundations guide as well as guides for teachers, leaders and administrators, front-line staff, curriculum developers, and researchers.
- Indigenous Pedagogy: Decolonizing Higher Education resource from Vancouver Community College
- Consider adopting one or more of these 100 Ways: Indigenizing & Decolonizing Academic Programs.