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This book examines inclusion teaching at the college and university
level. It establishes the importance of the Humanities disciplines
and the use of qualitative analysis as a means of understanding and
encouraging democratic materials and classroom organization. The
first section of the text provides two primers for those unfamiliar
with pedagogical history and theory. These primers are designed to
give basic information and sources for additional study. They trace
pedagogical influences from foundationism, neoliberalism, conflict,
and critical theories to critical race theory, Red pedagogy, and
decolonization theories. The second half of the book focuses on
strategies to assist those attempting classroom inclusion. These
chapters are designed to assist with practical ways in which
inclusion can be advanced as well as strategies to assist junior
faculty in the navigation of the politics of inclusive education.
This volume examines concepts of disability and wellness in Native
American communities, prominently featuring the life's work of Dr.
Carol Locust. Authors Locust and Lovern confront the difficulties
of translating not only words but also entire concepts between
Western and Indigenous cultures, and by increasing the cultural
competency of those unfamiliar with Native American ways of being
are able to bring readers from both cultures into a more equal
dialogue. The three sections contained herein focus on
intercultural translation; dialogues with Native American community
members; and finally a discussion of being in the world gently as
caregivers.
A Critical Pedagogy for Native American Education Policy is an
application of critical pedagogical theory to historical and recent
Native American educational policy. Focusing primarily on the
Mvskoke (Creek), the authors provide a detailed historic timeline
that is tied to the functionalist view of sociology as it is
reflected in the institution of education in general. Knowles and
Lovern examine the policy from the critical perspective with the
application of Habermas and Freire. They argue that the
functionalist mode of education has furthered the cause of
colonization and its attendant cultural destruction. The
emancipatory possibilities presented by the work of Habermas and
Freire are mined for their application to the deficits created by
the historical and continued colonization of Native Americans.
This volume examines concepts of disability and wellness in Native
American communities, prominently featuring the life's work of Dr.
Carol Locust. Authors Locust and Lovern confront the difficulties
of translating not only words but also entire concepts between
Western and Indigenous cultures, and by increasing the cultural
competency of those unfamiliar with Native American ways of being
are able to bring readers from both cultures into a more equal
dialogue. The three sections contained herein focus on
intercultural translation; dialogues with Native American community
members; and finally a discussion of being in the world gently as
caregivers.
Global Indigenous Communities is a wide-ranging examination of
global Indigenous communities that continue to suffer from
colonization and assimilation issues, including intergenerational
trauma. The scholarship is interdisciplinary; it is not easily
categorized as sociology, anthropology, ethnography, or philosophy,
but cuts across all of these disciplines, as well as Indigenous
methodologies. The book not only presents an academic study of
Indigenous issues, covering Indigenous community life, religion,
the environment, economic matters, education, and healthcare, but
also incorporates contributions from Carol Locust, EdD, that
reflect on her lifetime of experience in Indigenous education and
healthcare. Each studied prism of Indigenous life is revealed to be
impacted by the experience of intergenerational trauma that results
from continued colonization. Ultimately, this book aims to bridge
the communication gap between Western and Indigenous scholarship
and readership, artfully combining Indigenous approaches with a
traditional academic style.
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