Exploring culturally sustaining practice for indigenous learners in initial teacher education in Aotearoa New Zealand

Culturally sustaining practices are advocated for enhancing learning experiences of Indigenous learners. Developing the use of culturally sustaining practice is challenging, in part as many educators do not have Indigenous heritage and have not themselves experienced such teaching. Here we discuss a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Robin Averill, Hiria McRae
Format: Article
Language:Portuguese
Published: Universidade Federal do Oeste da Bahia 2020-05-01
Series:Pesquisa e Ensino
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.37853/pqe.e202014
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spelling doaj-927fd01ee2054a4e90ac65437f932b752020-11-25T03:46:08ZporUniversidade Federal do Oeste da BahiaPesquisa e Ensino2675-19332020-05-011112010.37853/pqe.e202014Exploring culturally sustaining practice for indigenous learners in initial teacher education in Aotearoa New ZealandRobin Averill0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8941-5565Hiria McRae1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5340-5421Wellington School of EducationWellington School of EducationCulturally sustaining practices are advocated for enhancing learning experiences of Indigenous learners. Developing the use of culturally sustaining practice is challenging, in part as many educators do not have Indigenous heritage and have not themselves experienced such teaching. Here we discuss an investigation into how we develop student teacher understanding of practice culturally sustaining for Indigenous Māori learners in our initial mathematics teacher education courses. We show how a four-dimension framework (accommodation, reformation, transformation, and representation) can expose strengths and opportunities for improvement in course content and approaches towards developing culturally sustaining practices. Factors considered include education policy, resources, course development and content. Affordances (e.g., ease of use) and challenges (e.g., contextal factors) of using the framework are discussed. We demonstrate that the framework can be a useful tool for teacher educators working to strengthen their focus on developing culturally sustaining teacher practice to enhance educational opportunities of Indigenous learners.https://doi.org/10.37853/pqe.e202014initial teacher educationindigenous. mathematics educationculturally sustaining practice
collection DOAJ
language Portuguese
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robin Averill
Hiria McRae
spellingShingle Robin Averill
Hiria McRae
Exploring culturally sustaining practice for indigenous learners in initial teacher education in Aotearoa New Zealand
Pesquisa e Ensino
initial teacher education
indigenous. mathematics education
culturally sustaining practice
author_facet Robin Averill
Hiria McRae
author_sort Robin Averill
title Exploring culturally sustaining practice for indigenous learners in initial teacher education in Aotearoa New Zealand
title_short Exploring culturally sustaining practice for indigenous learners in initial teacher education in Aotearoa New Zealand
title_full Exploring culturally sustaining practice for indigenous learners in initial teacher education in Aotearoa New Zealand
title_fullStr Exploring culturally sustaining practice for indigenous learners in initial teacher education in Aotearoa New Zealand
title_full_unstemmed Exploring culturally sustaining practice for indigenous learners in initial teacher education in Aotearoa New Zealand
title_sort exploring culturally sustaining practice for indigenous learners in initial teacher education in aotearoa new zealand
publisher Universidade Federal do Oeste da Bahia
series Pesquisa e Ensino
issn 2675-1933
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Culturally sustaining practices are advocated for enhancing learning experiences of Indigenous learners. Developing the use of culturally sustaining practice is challenging, in part as many educators do not have Indigenous heritage and have not themselves experienced such teaching. Here we discuss an investigation into how we develop student teacher understanding of practice culturally sustaining for Indigenous Māori learners in our initial mathematics teacher education courses. We show how a four-dimension framework (accommodation, reformation, transformation, and representation) can expose strengths and opportunities for improvement in course content and approaches towards developing culturally sustaining practices. Factors considered include education policy, resources, course development and content. Affordances (e.g., ease of use) and challenges (e.g., contextal factors) of using the framework are discussed. We demonstrate that the framework can be a useful tool for teacher educators working to strengthen their focus on developing culturally sustaining teacher practice to enhance educational opportunities of Indigenous learners.
topic initial teacher education
indigenous. mathematics education
culturally sustaining practice
url https://doi.org/10.37853/pqe.e202014
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AT hiriamcrae exploringculturallysustainingpracticeforindigenouslearnersininitialteachereducationinaotearoanewzealand
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