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Bitterroot as a metaphor for decolonizing education
Starleigh GrassFebruary 15th, 2013
SD78 District Day
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
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
Purple means it’s your turn
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
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
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
Bitterroot
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?
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
Grassroots Change and Culturally Responsive Teaching
IK
Culture
Self determination
and decolonization
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
Grassroots Change and Culturally Responsive Teaching
IK
Culture
Self determination
and decolonization
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
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)
25 Indigenous ProjectsSmith, L. T. (1999). Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples. New York, New York: Zen Publications.
• Reframing • Envisioning
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
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
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
Reframing the roots of inequity in education
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
Harm
Locating responsibilityKuokkanen, R. (2007). Reshaping the University: Responsibility, Indigenous Epistemes, and the Logic of Gift. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press.
StudentCommunity
Outside factors Institution
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?
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.
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.
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?
If these are the roots of inequity, what are the solutions?
Structural support?
Individual responsibility?
Nurturing revitalization
IK
Culture
Self determination
and decolonization
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.
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.
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.
What does/could that look like on the ground?
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
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.