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Effective Indigenization of Curriculum in Canada and New Zealand: Towards Culturally Responsive Pedagogies
Author(s) -
Edward R. Howe,
Shelly Johnson,
Fiona Te Momo
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of contemporary issues in education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1718-4770
DOI - 10.20355/jcie29443
Subject(s) - indigenization , curriculum , indigenous , pedagogy , sociology , government (linguistics) , context (archaeology) , political science , traditional knowledge , treaty of waitangi , public administration , public relations , law , treaty , ecology , linguistics , philosophy , paleontology , anthropology , biology
In this paper, we critically examine culturally responsive pedagogies in Canada and New Zealand. As each nation has a wide range of government policies and education systems, we focus our investigation on indigenization of teacher education programs at one institution within each cultural context. We are in search of best practices in terms of indigenizing the curriculum and effective ways to facilitate the gradual acculturation of novice teachers. Moreover, we seek to find out how these unique, exemplary programs are responding to calls to action (Truth and Reconciliation Commission in Canada and Ka Hikitia in New Zealand) in light of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as a framework for reconciliation. The New Zealand Maori cultural context provides a mirror for us to reflect on Canada’s curriculum reform efforts to embed Indigenous ways of knowing into teacher education. For, it is teachers who ultimately can lead the way to advancing Indigenous perspectives, reversing decades of assimilation policies, evoking social change, and providing the bridge between government rhetoric and meaningful student learning.

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