When the First Nations people started to be aware of the fact that the new settlers were to share with them the lands and everything on it, the aboriginal people were defensive at first but this stance changed as it was time to give space for wisdom. What helped also in hastening this process is the geopolitical upheaval in the number if settlers and their determination to exploit the land and make it livable and beneficial for many people. I am not saying that the aboriginal people were not productive. On the contrary they were more productive within their limited community. All these factors, along with the social, economic, political changes, led to the final integration of the aboriginal people in the new or modern community. The integration didn’t happen completely and it didn’t happen overnight. There are a lot of aspects in the society that will be affected or dealt with to achieve an effective integration. One of these aspects is the educational sector and how it needs to cater for the needs of those who are new to it.
The educational sector was and still is one of the fields that has to witness a lot of changes and modifications to pave the way towards a complete and integral system that deals learners whoever they are. This is not an easy task in the realm of education. There are a lot inconsistencies, rejections, and alienation in the process.
The project will also tackle the merits behind the attempts which help the aboriginal conceive the different and new educational sphere around them.
The resources I am planning tentatively to deal rely on are ( there will be some changes in the list):
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- Aboriginal Digital Opportunities : Addressing Aboriginal Learning Needs Through the Use of Learning Technologies by David Greenall -2001
- Bowers, C.A., Vasquez, Migues, and Roaf, Mary, “Native People and the Challenge of Computers: Reservation Schools, Individualism, and Consumerism,” American Indian 24(2), 2000, 182-199.
- Cole, P. & O’Riley, P. (2012). Coyote and Raven put the ‘Digital’ in Technology – Hands Up and Down to Earth. Transnational Curriculum Inquiry,9 (2), 18-34. http://nitinat.library.ubc.ca/ojs/index.php/tci <21 April 2013>
- Delgado, Vivian, “Technology and Native America: A Double-Edged Sword” in Toward Digital Equity: Bridging the Divide in Education, eds. Gwen Solomon, Nancy J. Allen, and Paul Resta, New York: Pearson Education Group, Inc., 2003, 88-98.
- Ginsburg, Faye D., “Screen Memories: Resignifying the Traditional in Indigenous Media, “ in Media Worlds: Anthropology on a New Terrain, eds. Faye D. Ginsburg, Lila Abu-Lughod, and Brian Larkin, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002, 39-57.
- Hearne, Joanna, “Indigenous Animation: Educational Programming, Narrative Interventions, and Children’s Cultures,” in Global Indigenous Media: Cultures, Poetics, and Politics, eds. Pamela Wilson and Michelle Stewart, Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2008, 89-108.
- Howe, Craig, “Cyberspace is No Place for Tribalism,” Wicazo Sa Review (Fall, 1998), 19-27.
- Lang, Elizabeth, “Transformative Learning: The Trojan Horse of Globalization?”
- Mary, Sally Engle, “Human-Rights Law and the Demonization of Culture“, Anthropology News, Vol. 44(2), 2009, 4-5.
- Michael Marker, “The Education of Little Tree: What it Really Reveals about the Public Schools” Phi Delta Kappan (November, 1992), 226-227. ( Actually I am planning to use all Maker’s articles that are required readings for the course as they are great source of information)
- The nature connection with David Suzuki (DVD)
- http://www.firstnations.org/program-main
- http://www.fnesc.ca/
- http://www.raventales.com/
- http://www.indigenouspeople.net/raven.htm
- http://www.aadnc-aandc.gc.ca/eng/1307460755710/1307460872523
( in addition to this list , I will consult some of the great resources posted in the blog)
Hussain