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Decolonizing educational practices through fostering ethical relationality in an urban Indigenous classroom

Faculty Advisor

Date

2021

Keywords

Indigenous education, decolonizing education, ethical relationality, wîcihitowin and wahkohtowin

Abstract (summary)

To foster the success of young Indigenous learners, our study partnered with an urban Indigenous school in Alberta’s capital region. This paper explores the decolonizing practices that emerged through the ethical relationships developed with students and staff guided by the Cree wisdom teachings of wîcihitowin and wahkohtowin. A group of Indigenous and Canadian university and school-based co-researchers worked with a class of students over four years (from grade 6 to 9) incorporating Indigenous knowledges with the mandated Social Studies curriculum. The teachings included Cree language, land-based activities, ceremony and story. Students expressed appreciation for the teachings and the opportunities they had experienced over the course of the study; it was a small step towards decolonizing education.

Publication Information

Moostoos-Lafferty, E., Burns, N., Conrad, D., & Wentworth, A. (2020). Decolonizing educational practices through fostering ethical relationality in an urban Indigenous classroom. McGill Journal of Education, 55(2), 486–495. https://mje.mcgill.ca/article/view/9863

DOI

Notes

Item Type

Article

Language

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs (CC BY-NC-ND)