2018
DOI: 10.1177/1440783318794295
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Indigenous young people, disadvantage and the violence of settler colonial education policy and curriculum

Abstract: In this article, I argue that settler colonial violence is manifest both in the experiences of Indigenous young people in their engagement with the education system, and in the fact that despite a decade of targeted efforts to close the gap in Indigenous educational ‘disadvantage’ – it still remains. Drawing on a small qualitative study undertaken with Indigenous high school students from across New South Wales, Australia, this research reveals that the dismissal of Indigenous knowledge, stories and perspectiv… Show more

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Cited by 55 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…Decades of research indicate that Aboriginal students fare poorly at school on a multitude of factors (Gillan et al ., 2017), and yet educational policy continues to focus primarily on academic underachievement, low retention and poor attendance, with little mention or regard for the ongoing effects of colonialism and the negative impact this has on Indigenous students' health and wellbeing. Many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students experience daily racism and institutional discrimination within schools in Australia (Brown, 2018), with research showing it is ‘teachers who are often mentioned as a primary reason’ Indigenous students leave school (Lampert, 2012, p. 89). Are teachers aware of this?…”
Section: A Focus On Pl In Relation To Crs and First Nations Students—lessons From The Empiricalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Decades of research indicate that Aboriginal students fare poorly at school on a multitude of factors (Gillan et al ., 2017), and yet educational policy continues to focus primarily on academic underachievement, low retention and poor attendance, with little mention or regard for the ongoing effects of colonialism and the negative impact this has on Indigenous students' health and wellbeing. Many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students experience daily racism and institutional discrimination within schools in Australia (Brown, 2018), with research showing it is ‘teachers who are often mentioned as a primary reason’ Indigenous students leave school (Lampert, 2012, p. 89). Are teachers aware of this?…”
Section: A Focus On Pl In Relation To Crs and First Nations Students—lessons From The Empiricalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Traumatic schooling experiences of Indigenous adults, for example, contribute to the distrust and disconnection between schools and families (De Plevitz 2007) and negatively affect learning processes and outcomes of Indigenous children (Kearney et al 2014). At the same time, Indigenous parents may be reluctant to share their painful memories of schooling with their children which means that these important stories remain forever untold and wounds unhealed (Brown 2019). Another consequence is Indigenous learners hiding their Indigenous identities and reshaping themselves to assimilate into the dominant culture.…”
Section: Indigenous Content In Education Systems Across the Globementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a recent household survey conducted as part of the mobilisation of the Brewarrina literacy campaign (N = 231), just under 62% adults reported low or no literacy. Of these, 38% had completed at least year 10 level schooling, giving weight to claims by some of the failure of the education system to meet the basic literacy and numeracy needs of Aboriginal people (Gunstone, 2013;Brown, 2018).…”
Section: Brewarrina: a Legacy Of Disempowermentmentioning
confidence: 99%