TY - BOOK
T1 - Decolonising Mathematics Education
T2 - Transforming Pedagogy alongside First Peoples of Remote Australia
AU - Boyd, Nicole
N1 - Nicole Boyd, M.Phil. (2021), Queensland University of Technology, supports participatory action research processes in Youth Engagement in Allied Health YEAH!) Nicole supported Indigenous led social change projects at Melbourne University and taught in very remote Northern Territory Government schools. Nicole has presented two seminars for ATSIMA (Aboriginal Torres Strait Islander Mathematics Alliance).
PY - 2023/9/6
Y1 - 2023/9/6
N2 - First Peoples living in remote Australia are educated in two worlds. The future of bush food enterprises in outstations in Utopia depends on the successful transfer of intergenerational knowledge. High school girls respectfully inquire about how to harvest and process important cultural materials from country. Students, senior women and young men strengthen their connections to self, kinship and culture and share responsibility to care for country. Careful collaboration with First Nations people creates opportunities to provide mathematics education which complements and is informed by the work that already exists in the local school community. Consultation with assistant teachers, students, and other community members creates opportunities to validate Indigenous pedagogies in mathematics education. Decolonising Mathematics Education explores and responds to student interest in managing and harvesting akatyerr (desert raisin). Transforming pedagogy enables the students to respond more broadly to the needs of Utopia Eastern Anmatyerr and Alyawarr people to price and sell this important bush food. Income generated from the enterprise is modest, however the skills of a small start-up business have been applied to many learning opportunities that exist in the local community.
AB - First Peoples living in remote Australia are educated in two worlds. The future of bush food enterprises in outstations in Utopia depends on the successful transfer of intergenerational knowledge. High school girls respectfully inquire about how to harvest and process important cultural materials from country. Students, senior women and young men strengthen their connections to self, kinship and culture and share responsibility to care for country. Careful collaboration with First Nations people creates opportunities to provide mathematics education which complements and is informed by the work that already exists in the local school community. Consultation with assistant teachers, students, and other community members creates opportunities to validate Indigenous pedagogies in mathematics education. Decolonising Mathematics Education explores and responds to student interest in managing and harvesting akatyerr (desert raisin). Transforming pedagogy enables the students to respond more broadly to the needs of Utopia Eastern Anmatyerr and Alyawarr people to price and sell this important bush food. Income generated from the enterprise is modest, however the skills of a small start-up business have been applied to many learning opportunities that exist in the local community.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=86000136097&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Book
SN - 9789004682740
SN - 9789004682733
VL - 14
T3 - Anti-colonial Educational Perspectives for Transformative Change
BT - Decolonising Mathematics Education
PB - Brill Academic Publishers
CY - The Netherlands
ER -