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Bitterroot as a metaphor for decolonizing education Starleigh Grass February 15 th , 2013 SD78 District Day

Bitterroot draft 2 sd78

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Page 1: Bitterroot draft 2 sd78

Bitterroot as a metaphor for decolonizing education

Starleigh GrassFebruary 15th, 2013

SD78 District Day

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Recognition of territory

• We are on unceded Sto:lo territory• Thank you to the Sto:lo Nation for their

ongoing hospitality • Thank you to SD78 for hosting this day

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Methodology

• En’owkinwix• Opportunities for

collaboration/imagining/dreaming • Celebrate how far we’ve come, look forward

to where we need to go next • Support positive, productive dialogue • Twitter

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Purple means it’s your turn

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Properly introducing myself

• Tsilhqot’in – gold • Tletinqox-t’in, Yunesit’in, Tsi Del Del • E-li Jeff – knowledge and land justice• Nita Grass – education as empowerment • Mother/aunt – education as an obligation to

the future

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Increasing the integration of Aboriginal content and pedagogy

• Aboriginal Strategic Plan Implementation Committee • FNESC – EFP10/11, EFP12 • Educational Advisor for McGraw Hill • Professional development facilitator • K-12 humanities teacher in communities with high percentage of

Aboriginal students • Literacy coach – Lillooet Tribal Council • Curriculum development• TA Leyton Schnellert • BCTELA – journal co-editor Pamela Richardson • GAA Jeanette Armstrong, Bill Cohen • Twinkle’s Happy Place

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Introducing yourself

• 1) Your relationship to the First Nations on who’s territory you currently work in

• 2) Your current perceived role in decolonization as a community member and as a member of the educational community

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Bitterroot

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Teachers and community

• How can teachers form a symbiotic relationship with communities in order to enhance communities through education leading to long term growth in student achievement?

• Why is this the most pressing activity that all educators at all institutions need to engage in?

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Culturally responsive teaching

• I believe that supporting the capacity of classroom teachers to become culturally proficient in order to integrate IK and culture into classrooms is key to increasing Aboriginal achievement

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Grassroots Change and Culturally Responsive Teaching

IK

Culture

Self determination

and decolonization

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What is decolonization?

• Colonization – economic, social, cultural, political, religious, intellectual control of one group by another

• Decolonization – reclaiming and revitalizing Indigenous sovereignty in all these areas through structural and grassroots means

• Indigenization – supports decolonization and resists colonization through the integration of Indigenous epistemology in academia

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Grassroots Change and Culturally Responsive Teaching

IK

Culture

Self determination

and decolonization

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5 stages of decolonizationLaenui, P. (2000). Process of decolonization. In M. Baptiste (Ed.) Reclaiming Indigenous Voice and Vision. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press. Pp. 150-

160

1) Rediscovery and recovery 2) Mourning 3) Dreaming 4) Commitment 5) Action

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Medicine wheelBaptiste, M. (2000). Reclaiming Indigenous Voice and Vision. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press.

• Mapping colonialism (West)• Diagnosing colonialism (North)• Healing colonized indigenous peoples (East)• Indigenous renaissance (South)

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25 Indigenous ProjectsSmith, L. T. (1999). Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples. New York, New York: Zen Publications.

• Reframing • Envisioning

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Non-linear transformative praxisSmith, G. H. (2003). Kau Papa Maori:Theorizing Indigenous transformation of education and schooling.

http://www.aare.edu.au/03pap/pih03342.pdf p.13

Resistance

ConscientizationTransformative Action

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Awareness is not enough

• In anti-racist education, being aware of racism and different perspectives is not enough. One can be aware, and yet continue to perpetuate oppression.

• Gorski, P. C. (2009). Good intentions are not enough: A decolonizing intercultural education. Intercultural Education 19(6). P515-525. Retrieved fromhttp://www.everettcc.edu/uploadedFiles/Faculty_Staff/TLC/Diversity_Teaching_Lab/intercultural-education.pdf

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Non-linear transformative praxisSmith, G. H. (2003). Kau Papa Maori:Theorizing Indigenous transformation of education and schooling.

http://www.aare.edu.au/03pap/pih03342.pdf p.13

Resistance

ConscientizationTransformative Action

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Reframing the roots of inequity in education

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Achievement discrepancy

Inequitable distribution

of public resources

Grade 12 50%

PSE growing

gap

Association of Colleges and Universities Canada. (2010). National working summit on Aboriginal post-secondary education. Ottawa, Ontario: Association of Colleges and Universities Canada in association with the National Aboriginal Achievement Foundation. http://www.aucc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/aboriginal-report- summit-aboriginal-pse-2010-12-15-e.pdf

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Harm

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Locating responsibilityKuokkanen, R. (2007). Reshaping the University: Responsibility, Indigenous Epistemes, and the Logic of Gift. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press.

StudentCommunity

Outside factors Institution

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Invisibility

• Academia presents Indigenous thought as inferior to Eurocentric thought

• Strips Aboriginal students of their heritage and identity

• Succumb to eurocentric thought, • Youngblood Henderson, J. (2000b). Postcolonial ghost dancing: Diagnosing European colonialism. In M. Battiste (Ed.), Reclaiming

Indigenous Voice and Vision (57-76). Vancouver, BC: UBC Press.

• or else?

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Liberal individual ideology

• Power blind tolerance discourses which do not explicitly address racism only serve to blame Aboriginal students when it is the institutions that are failing

• There is room in the curriculum for decolonization, but teachers aren’t making it happen

• Orlowski, P. (2008). "That would certainly be spoiling them": Liberal discourses of Social Studies teachers and concerns about Aboriginal students. Canadian Journal of Native Education 31 (2). p110-129.

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Culture as a means of assimilation?

• Integration of culture into the classroom for the sole purpose of increasing literacy and numeracy achievement in order to better integrate indigenous peoples into the neoliberal market is a neocolonial version of education for assimilation

• Kostogriz, A. (2011). Interrogating the ethics of literacy intervention in indigenous schools. English Teaching: Practice and Critique 10 (2). P24-38.

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Purpose

• If the purpose of education is not solely to position the individual to compete in an individualistic capitalist economy, then what is the purpose of education?

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If these are the roots of inequity, what are the solutions?

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Structural support?

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Individual responsibility?

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Nurturing revitalization

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IK

Culture

Self determination

and decolonization

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Indigenous knowledges are inherently disruptive

• Requires epistemological and pedagogical shift that inherently undermines the privileging of Eurocentric thought

• Experiential, student centered, place based • Mason, R. (2008). Conflicts and Lessons in First Nations Secondary Education: An Analysis of BC First Nations Studies. Canadian Journal of

Native Education 31 (2). pp 130-153.

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Cultural integration

• Indigenous knowledge base increases high school completion

• Nazeem, M., Puchala, C., Janus, M. (2011). Does the EDI Equivalently Measure Facets of School Readiness for Aboriginal and Non-Aboriginal children? Social Indicators Research, 103, 299-314.

• Being culturally connected increases post secondary completion

• Drywater-Whitekiller, V. (2010). Cultural resilience: Voices of Native American students in college retention. The Canadian Journal of Native Studies 30 (1). p1-19.

• Communities with a cultural continuity have lower suicide rates

• Chandler, M. J., & Lalonde, C. (1998). Cultural continuity as a hedge against suicide in Canada's First Nations.Transcultural Psychiatry 35 (2). 191-219.

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Community connections

• Make connections to Aboriginal communities • Learn about the histories of Aboriginal

communities • Orlowski, P. (2008). "That would certainly be spoiling them": Liberal discourses of Social Studies teachers and concerns about Aboriginal

students. Canadian Journal of Native Education 31 (2). p110-129.

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What does/could that look like on the ground?

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Self determination and decolonization

• University classroom climate is a strong indicator of drop out rates in post-secondary

• Lindsay, W. G. (2010). Redman in the ivory tower: First Nations students and negative classroom environments in the university setting. The Canadian Journal of Native Studies 30 (1). p 143-154.

• Shifting the purpose of education as a means to explicitly to address ongoing injustices shifts classroom climate and teaching attitudes

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It is being done

• Self governed Aboriginal post-secondary institutions, developed with the purpose of building capacity to meet the needs of decolonization, have a higher success rate than mainstream institutions

• Stonechild, B. (2006). The New Buffalo: The Struggle for Aboriginal Post-secondary Education in Canada. Winnipeg, Manitoba: University of Manitoba Press.

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