Design and pedagogical practices of an Inuit-focused Bachelor of Education program in Labrador
Memorial University’s 2009 Presidential Task Force on Aboriginal Initiatives called for the establishment of a community-based teacher education program for Labrador. The Faculty of Education at Memorial and the Nunatsiavut Government (NG) subsequently worked together to develop an Inuit-focused pri...
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doaj-8e20bce2cad1497fb0f99df6a5fcc9b72021-08-02T20:33:10ZengUniversity of Aberdeen, School of EducationEducation in the North0424-55122398-01842018-08-01251-215517410.26203/m6ts-5k31Design and pedagogical practices of an Inuit-focused Bachelor of Education program in LabradorSylvia Moore0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0465-8024Gerald Galway1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2209-0513Memorial UniversityMemorial UniversityMemorial University’s 2009 Presidential Task Force on Aboriginal Initiatives called for the establishment of a community-based teacher education program for Labrador. The Faculty of Education at Memorial and the Nunatsiavut Government (NG) subsequently worked together to develop an Inuit-focused primary-elementary pre-service program for Goose Bay, a community adjacent to Nunatsiavut. For NG, the training of local Inuit teachers in the Inuit Bachelor of Education (IBED) is an important step towards taking control of the K-12 education system in their land claim area. In this paper we explore the design and pedagogical practices of that program. The macro-level program design pays attention to context-relevant factors such as academic and cultural supports, program sequence and schedule, workload-family balance, and the selection of instructors. The curriculum design is guided by “Two-Eyed Seeing,” a model that respects the differences in Western and Indigenous ways of understanding the world and draws on the strengths of both (Marshall, Marshall & Iwama, 2010). Inuit culture is infused, in all aspects of the IBED, through landbased experiences, Inutittut language training, the inclusion of Inuit Elders, and the use of Inuit specific resources. The pre-service teachers are developing pedagogical practices that: reflect Inuit ways of teaching and learning, embrace culturally relevant Inuit education within the context of provincial curricula, and align with the goals of The National Inuit Education Strategy (2011).https://www.abdn.ac.uk/education/research/eitn/journal/549teacherseducationinuitcommunity-basedculturally-relevant |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Sylvia Moore Gerald Galway |
spellingShingle |
Sylvia Moore Gerald Galway Design and pedagogical practices of an Inuit-focused Bachelor of Education program in Labrador Education in the North teachers education inuit community-based culturally-relevant |
author_facet |
Sylvia Moore Gerald Galway |
author_sort |
Sylvia Moore |
title |
Design and pedagogical practices of an Inuit-focused Bachelor of Education program in Labrador |
title_short |
Design and pedagogical practices of an Inuit-focused Bachelor of Education program in Labrador |
title_full |
Design and pedagogical practices of an Inuit-focused Bachelor of Education program in Labrador |
title_fullStr |
Design and pedagogical practices of an Inuit-focused Bachelor of Education program in Labrador |
title_full_unstemmed |
Design and pedagogical practices of an Inuit-focused Bachelor of Education program in Labrador |
title_sort |
design and pedagogical practices of an inuit-focused bachelor of education program in labrador |
publisher |
University of Aberdeen, School of Education |
series |
Education in the North |
issn |
0424-5512 2398-0184 |
publishDate |
2018-08-01 |
description |
Memorial University’s 2009 Presidential Task Force on Aboriginal Initiatives called for the establishment of a community-based teacher education program for Labrador. The Faculty of Education at Memorial and the Nunatsiavut Government (NG) subsequently worked together to develop an Inuit-focused primary-elementary pre-service program for Goose Bay, a community adjacent to Nunatsiavut. For NG, the training of local Inuit teachers in the Inuit Bachelor of Education (IBED) is an important step towards taking control of the K-12 education system in their land claim area. In this paper we explore the design and pedagogical practices of that program. The macro-level program design pays attention to context-relevant factors such as academic and cultural supports, program sequence and schedule, workload-family balance, and the selection of instructors. The curriculum design is guided by “Two-Eyed Seeing,” a model that respects the differences in Western and Indigenous ways of understanding the world and draws on the strengths of both (Marshall, Marshall & Iwama, 2010). Inuit culture is infused, in all aspects of the IBED, through landbased experiences, Inutittut language training, the inclusion of Inuit Elders, and the use of Inuit specific resources. The pre-service teachers are developing pedagogical practices that: reflect Inuit ways of teaching and learning, embrace culturally relevant Inuit education within the context of provincial curricula, and align with the goals of The National Inuit Education Strategy (2011). |
topic |
teachers education inuit community-based culturally-relevant |
url |
https://www.abdn.ac.uk/education/research/eitn/journal/549 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT sylviamoore designandpedagogicalpracticesofaninuitfocusedbachelorofeducationprograminlabrador AT geraldgalway designandpedagogicalpracticesofaninuitfocusedbachelorofeducationprograminlabrador |
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