2020
DOI: 10.1080/13688790.2020.1759755
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‘While I knew I was raced, I didn’t think much of it’: the need for racial literacy in decolonising classrooms

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Cited by 15 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Collaborative teaching teams that include both Indigenous and non-Indigenous staff can be a strategy for sharing the load. Our understanding of genuine collaboration aligns with others who have published on their experiences: non-Indigenous staff must be prepared to interrogate their own subjectivity and accept that this work is personal for everyone, not only for Indigenous staff (Daniels-Mayes et al, 2019;Brown et al, 2021).…”
mentioning
confidence: 55%
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“…Collaborative teaching teams that include both Indigenous and non-Indigenous staff can be a strategy for sharing the load. Our understanding of genuine collaboration aligns with others who have published on their experiences: non-Indigenous staff must be prepared to interrogate their own subjectivity and accept that this work is personal for everyone, not only for Indigenous staff (Daniels-Mayes et al, 2019;Brown et al, 2021).…”
mentioning
confidence: 55%
“…This can come at a cost to Indigenous staff, whose very "presence can be unsettling for students" (Bond, 2014, n.p. ) and who bear the brunt of students' discomfort when presented with ideas that destabilise their senses of history, nation and self (Gatwiri et al, 2021;Brown et al, 2021). The potential for burnout of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander academics is compounded by the small number employed in Australian higher education, the many demands on their time and knowledge, and the often-invisible work required to fulfil community responsibilities (Asmar and Page, 2018).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To answer these questions with some intellectual integrity, we must acknowledge that "throughout the history of education and research, Blac/k scholarship and literacies have long been ignored, silenced, and pathologised" (Laughter et al, 2021). As Brown et al (2021) write, the "taxonomy of race that emerged in Australia in relation to Indigenous Peoples [. .…”
Section: Racial Literacy: Reading Race In Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Skerrett (2011) asks, what is our “apprehension and critique of [our] own understandings about, and practices of dealing with, race?” To answer these questions with some intellectual integrity, we must acknowledge that “throughout the history of education and research, Blac/k scholarship and literacies have long been ignored, silenced, and pathologised” (Laughter et al , 2021). As Brown et al (2021) write, the “taxonomy of race that emerged in Australia in relation to Indigenous Peoples […] is underpinned by an ongoing logic of elimination”.…”
Section: Racial Literacy: Reading Race In Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Can twenty-first-century Scottish society recognise historical and contemporary cultural, ethnic and religious diversity as enriching rather than divisive, and begin to probe and challenge the deep-rooted and damaging mythologies of eugenics and 'White' superiority that have been used for exploitative purposes (Charles, 2019)? The challenge is for Scotland to recognise the intersectionality of race, culture, gender and class, and to use conceptual tools such as racial literacy in reconfiguring itself and striving to be authentically inclusive (Brown et al, 2021). This will prompt contemporary Scotland to move beyond the initial challenges to the status quo, such as Black History Month.…”
Section: Decolonising the Curriculum In Scotlandmentioning
confidence: 99%