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Harrison, Neil; Page, Susan; Finneran, Michelle – Australian Educational Researcher, 2013
This paper maps ethical and epistemological issues around attempts by a university to negotiate with the traditional custodians of the Sydney basin, the Darug, to facilitate the intergenerational transmission of knowledge within their community, and through the university curriculum. The theory and practice of research raised some important…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Universities
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Harrison, Neil; Trudgett, Michelle; Page, Susan – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2017
Indigenous Australians represent 2.2% of the working age population, yet account for only 1.4% of all university enrolments. In relation to higher degree research students, Indigenous Australians account for 1.1% of enrolments, but only 0.8% of all higher degree research completions. This paper reports on findings that emerged from an Australian…
Descriptors: Doctoral Dissertations, Indigenous Populations, Graduate Students, Foreign Countries
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Harrison, Neil – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2003
This paper concerns my own reflections on ethnographic research with Indigenous students studying at university. I began the research by using the methodology of interpretive ethnography to discover what constitutes success for Indigenous students studying at university. But after some unflattering critiques of my initial interpretation of the…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Ethnography, Indigenous Populations, College Students
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Harrison, Neil – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2007
Research in Indigenous Australian education is at a dead-end. Researchers are still heading out into the field to look for new knowledge to answer old questions. The same epistemology dominates how we look, and where, while the methodology provides the researcher with a forced choice, one where either the student or the teacher is blamed for the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Epistemology, Indigenous Knowledge