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An Aboriginal Perspective on Education – Policy and Practice

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Abstract

Australian Aboriginal people have had to engage in the dominant education system since colonisation. In this paper we have focused on the many debates and policies issues in regards to the failure of the education system for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians from the 1840s until the present day. The discourses in contemporary times have centred on, the void of Aboriginal Australian experiences in the history of this country, school attendance, educational theory and pedagogies, social justice, cultural deficit and socio-cultural factors. It is our position that quality education in the form of policy and practice that embraces a two-way education will enhance educational out comes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children. Recently, national and state governments have written educational policies that provide for the embedding of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander content within curriculum areas however, it is still debatable whose perspective is being taught due to western pedagogical practices. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander epistemology and ontology is rarely considered to be a viable tool in the dominant education system. Our research engages in the historical and contemporary mainstream perspectives and provides an Aboriginal perspective for the debates on education in Australia.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Australian Aboriginal people are divided into two major groups – salt water people who live near the coast and freshwater people who live inland. The different geographies have created very different contexts for culture and the dispositions of the people.

  2. 2.

    We use the term “our” to refer to Indigenous students.

  3. 3.

    Within the Australian context, there is contention in how the contact between Captain James Cook with local Indigenous people is represented. In previous iterations of Australian history, this has been referred to as “settlement.” More recently, it is also referred to as the “invasion.” Competition for resources was strong and often at the expense of the First Australians.

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Correspondence to Dale Kerwin .

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© 2013 Springer Science+Business Media Singapore

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Kerwin, D., Van Issum, H. (2013). An Aboriginal Perspective on Education – Policy and Practice. In: Jorgensen, R., Sullivan, P., Grootenboer, P. (eds) Pedagogies to Enhance Learning for Indigenous Students. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-4021-84-5_1

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