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Kylie Smith; Sonja Arndt – Global Studies of Childhood, 2024
This response to the question about what we are angry about and what we dream of for young children reflects our work of over 30 years in Australasia. For Kylie in Australia and for Sonja in Aotearoa New Zealand and now also Australia. We direct the RECE common call, for an elevation of children's rights, to a voice, to a 'good' education, and to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Early Childhood Teachers, Childrens Rights
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Lynette Pretorius – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2024
There is an increasing focus on collecting more diverse demographic data from research participants but standard methodological approaches still hinder such efforts. This paper addresses the need for methodological improvements by advocating for the inclusion of self-written diversity statements in demographic surveys as a form of epistemic…
Descriptors: Position Papers, Intersectionality, Self Concept, Social Justice
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Wright, Peter; Down, Barry; Davies, Christina – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2022
This article considers Participatory Arts and sociocultural understandings of justice and praxis through the example of Big "h"ART, an Australian multi-award winning provider where both artists and participants -- often disenfranchised and marginalised young people -- co-create the work (Matarasso, 2018). Enacting social justice…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Art Activities, Artists, Youth Programs
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Merewether, Jane; Gobby, Brad; Blaise, Mindy – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2022
Onrushing ecological precarity and collapse disproportionately affects particular humans and their common worlds. This article proposes that in the face of the myriad crises the Earth is experiencing, and the uneven distribution of their effects, extending conceptions of justice in education beyond the human is crucial. This, however, requires…
Descriptors: Social Problems, Equal Education, Social Justice, Parks
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Brennan, Marie; Mayes, Eve; Zipin, Lew – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2022
The history of Australian mass schooling has seen contestations over school and curriculum purposes, zig-zagging across conservative and progressive directions. In this paper, we examine how possibilities for students to have 'voice', 'participation' and 'leadership' in their learning are currently limited in Australia. Policy framings, we argue,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Activism, Student Participation, Democratic Values
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Tebeje Molla – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2023
For forcibly displaced people, high educational attainment is economically and socially empowering. Using experiences of African refugee youth in Australia as an empirical case and drawing on the capability approach to social justice, this paper aims to assess the substantiveness of education opportunities of refugees. Qualitative data were…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Youth, Refugees, Policy
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Aleryk Fricker; A. Bryan Fricker – Australian Journal of Music Education, 2023
Every aspect of the Australian education system is a colonial construct, which was established across the continent and adjacent islands as part of the ongoing British colonisation process. As such, in contemporary music classrooms in Australia, there are decisions made every day that perpetuate settler futurity. This paper explores five ways…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Decolonization, Indigenous Populations, Music Education
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Scorringe, Aaron; Philpot, Rod; Bruce, Toni – Curriculum Studies in Health and Physical Education, 2021
New Zealand and Australia introduced health and physical education curricula espousing a socially-critical perspective more than two decades ago. Yet, despite growth in advocacy and teaching resources, there is little research exploring how HPE teachers are enacting these pedagogies. This article addresses the challenge of understanding what six…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Critical Theory, Health Education, Physical Education
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Phelan, Liam; Lumb, Matt – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2021
Climate change impacts cascade across scales and sectors, and present specific threats to education institutions and systems, including reduced educational access, participation and attainment by students. In this paper, we set out the pursuit of climate change mitigation and adaptation responses, grounded in commitments to equity and justice, as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Climate, Environmental Education
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Carly Steele; Graeme Gower; Tetiana Bogachenko – Australian Journal of Education, 2024
In this article, we argue that current assessment practices in higher education require urgent examination and should be re-imagined in culturally responsive ways to ensure fairness for all. From sociocultural and social justice perspectives, we highlight examples of cultural and linguistic bias in assessment that disadvantages many First Nations…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Indigenous Populations, College Students, Student Evaluation
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Carroll, Kay; Littlejohn, Kate – Curriculum Journal, 2022
The paper critiques the curriculum construction of historical consciousness within Australian school systems. National and trans-national discourses about identity, culture, gender, race and class influence the development of historical consciousness in Australian classrooms. During this unprecedented period of shared grief and global trauma,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, History Instruction, Historical Interpretation, Social Justice
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Burgess, Cathie; Lowe, Kevin – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2022
In Australia, pervasive deficit representations and positioning of Aboriginal peoples continue to impact on teachers' capacity to meaningfully embed Aboriginal curriculum and pedagogies into their teaching. This sits within a policy context driven by standardization, competition and market forces focused on closing the gap between Aboriginal and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Educational Policy
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Larissa McLean Davies – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2024
In 2022, after two years of the COVID virus profoundly interrupting social connection, learning, work and human mobility, governments worldwide turned material and rhetorical attention to life 'post-pandemic'. Understandably, teachers who were central in keeping communities virtually connected during the pandemic--are positioned as core to a…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, COVID-19, Pandemics, Creative Teaching
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P. J. White; E. Mayes; B. Sutton; J. P. Ferguson; M. Green – Teaching Education, 2024
Teachers are working in disturbing and challenging times, characterised by coterminous crises, the COVID-19 pandemic and human induced climate change; these are transforming our working conditions and the lives of students and teachers. In this research, we looked to our own pedagogical practices as teacher educators to collaboratively explore…
Descriptors: Crisis Management, COVID-19, Pandemics, Climate
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Lahiri-Roy, Reshmi; Belford, Nish; Sum, Nicola – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2023
This paper is based on personal narratives of three transnational women academics of colour, within education faculties in Australian universities. As postcolonial subjects we focus, on providing spaces for future educators, to find multiple ways of knowing, being, and relating. Reflecting upon our pedagogic practices, we analyse the empowerment…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Minority Group Teachers, College Faculty, Women Faculty
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