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Chia-Yu Wang; Yu-Chi Tseng; Shu-Sheng Lin; Shu-Chiu Liu; Alan Reid; Martha C. Monroe – Environmental Education Research, 2024
This study uses bibliometric techniques to explore the international knowledge base on climate change education (CCE), which considers education as crucial for addressing the climate emergency through fostering climate-literate citizens. Analyzing two decades of scientific literature on CCE, we identify evolving considerations, foci, trends, and…
Descriptors: Climate, Environmental Education, Educational Research, Scientific Research
Jessa Rogers – Australian Educational Researcher, 2024
This paper outlines the development of a new Indigenous research methodology: Indigenous Literature Re-view Methodology (ILRM). In the rejection of the idea that Western, dominant forms of research 'about' Indigenous peoples are most valid, ILRM was developed with aims to research in ways that give greater emphasis to Indigenous voices and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Research Methodology
Nally, David – Journal of Educational Change, 2022
The focus of this article is on the impacts of COVID-19 related manifestations of post-truth in educational settings in Australia. Within this context, there has been a reorientation of how wellbeing and academic achievement within schools reflect on broader trends within the general public, at local, state and national scales. Individual and…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Epistemology, Foreign Countries
Nguyen, Nhai Thi; Chia, Yeow-Tong – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2023
Epistemology has been recognized as a useful conceptual tool to explore how knowledge has been produced and/or reproduced in higher education research and its linkages to hidden global geopolitics and historical forces. The topic has attracted considerable attention in the literature, particularly that of scholars in the Global South (Canagarajah,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Research, Educational Researchers, Epistemology
Sawyer, Wayne; McLean Davies, Larissa – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2021
This paper uses a Gwen Harwood poem to open up questions of "knowing" around the teaching of Literature. Following our own brief reading of the poem, we particularly discuss ways in which questions of knowing/knowledge have been considered in Literature teaching historically, such as: - the binary of "knowledge" and…
Descriptors: Literature Appreciation, Poetry, Teaching Methods, Epistemology
Leimbach, Tania; Kent, Jennifer; Walker, Jeremy – Australian Journal of Adult Learning, 2022
Confronting the existential threat of climate and ecological crises in undergraduate teaching presents complex challenges. Educators in environmental and climate change studies rightly communicate the scale and urgency of these unfolding crises, yet at times fail to take into account the emotional and mental health impacts upon students acquiring…
Descriptors: Climate, Environmental Education, Undergraduate Study, Foreign Countries
Ritchie, Jenny; Phillips, Louise Gwenneth – Educational Review, 2023
In this position paper we consider the significance of global climate activism by children and young people in the light of ongoing western adult-centric policies and educational practices that largely continue to exclude Indigenous perspectives. Reflecting on the implications of this hegemony in the face of the convergent crises of climate and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, World Views, Climate, Early Childhood Education
Rachel Denee; Gai Lindsay; Sarah Probine – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
Although visual arts pedagogies are considered central within early childhood education programs, teacher self-efficacy has a direct impact on the quality and delivery of visual arts curricula. Until recently, the visual arts self-efficacy, pedagogical knowledge, and practice of in-service early childhood teachers have remained largely unexplored.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Teachers, Self Efficacy, Visual Arts
van Gelderen, Ben; Guthadjaka, Kathy – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2021
'Bothways' was an expression first utilised by Yolnu educators in the late 1980s to convey the profound intercultural epistemological foundations of Yolnu society that should also apply to modern "Balanda" (white) schooling systems. Despite the pressures from national, standardised curriculum and assessment regimes, 'Bothways' has not…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Epistemology
Damien Lyons; Janet Scull – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2024
Narrative inquiry has long been respected as a qualitative approach to researching the lived experiences of participants. Used widely in educational research the approach enables insights into the practices, perspectives and preferences of teachers, most often considering a small number of participants within a close circle of influence. In…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Epistemology, Phonics, Reading Instruction
Blackmore, Jill – Critical Studies in Education, 2022
In the entrepreneurial university, epistemic governance is exerted through external pressures of market competition, funding, university rankings and research assessment and internal processes of organisational restructuring and mechanisms of corporate governance to re/produce epistemic injustices. Data from a study of three Australian…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Institutional Characteristics, Entrepreneurship, Universities
Kelly, Stephen; Rigney, Lester-Irabinna – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
Colonial settler societies' differing concepts and experiences of time entangle in enactments of curriculum knowledge and the governing of human subjects. This article examines how an Anglo-Eurocentric historical representation of time is used as a principle of reason to establish the conditions of epistemic progress through the curriculum and…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Land Settlement
Enright, Eimear; Kirk, David; Macdonald, Doune – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2020
As new markets and opportunities for profit are being sought within and around schools, boundaries between private and public, profit and philanthropy are blurring and the boundaries that circumscribe knowledge and expertise are being reconstituted. This paper considers how expertise is constituted when curriculum work is outsourced to new actors…
Descriptors: Expertise, Neoliberalism, Outsourcing, Health Education
Ryder, Courtney; Mackean, Tamara; Coombs, Julieann; Williams, Hayley; Hunter, Kate; Holland, Andrew J. A.; Ivers, Rebecca Q. – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2020
Indigenous research Knowledges and methodologies have existed over millennia, however it is only recently that Indigenous scholars have been able to challenge institutional Western hegemony to reclaim sovereignty in the research space. Despite the high volume of quantitative research describing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health, there…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Research Methodology
Walker, Sue; Lunn-Brownlee, Jo; Scholes, Laura; Johansson, Eva – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2020
Background: A growing body of research shows that the beliefs we hold about the nature of knowing and knowledge (epistemic beliefs) may mediate moral reasoning. However, a limitation of much of the research in the area of epistemic beliefs is the lack of a longitudinal approach. Aims: The study investigated longitudinal changes in Australian…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Beliefs, Epistemology, Foreign Countries