Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T17:50:59.490Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Aboriginal Students Perceptions of the ‘World of Work’ and Implications for the Teaching of Work/Career Education

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2015

Di Russell*
Affiliation:
Di Russell is a Senior Education Officer for the Western Area of the Education Department of South Australia based in Whyalla, and is currently studying for a Master of Education in Aboriginal Studies through the University of New England
Get access

Extract

As part of my work this year I was required to undertake an evaluation project. I decided to combine some of my concerns about the appropriateness for Aboriginal students of some of the ways in which state education curriculum priorities are implemented with one of my focus curriculum areas, namely Work Education.

In South Australia the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education Policy ( AEP ) is seen as the overarching Aboriginal Education Policy. However, most Aboriginal students in South Australia and all state schools are required to address mandatory curriculum are as set out in the “Educating for the 21st Century” (1990), the curriculum policy document.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press or the authors 1992

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Choo, Christine. 1990. Aboriginal Child Poverty. Brotherhood of St Lawrence: Melbourne.Google Scholar
Christie, Michael J. 1987. Aboriginal perspectives on experience and learning: the role of language in Aboriginal education. Deakin University: Victoria.Google Scholar
Coombs, H.C., Brandi, M.M. and Snowdon, W.E. 1983. A Certain Heritage. Centre of Resource and Environmental Studies, Australian National University: Canberra.Google Scholar
DEET 1989. National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education Policy. Commonwealth of Australia.Google Scholar
Educating for the 21st Century. 1990. Education Department of South Australia.Google Scholar
Finn, T.B. 1991. Young People's Participation in Post-compulsory Education and Training. Report of the Australian Education Council Review Committee. Australian Government Publishing Service: Canberra.Google Scholar
Gale, Fay. 1972. Urban Aborigines. Australian National University Press: Canberra.Google Scholar
Harris, Stephen. 1988. ‘Culture Boundaries, Culture Maintenance-in-Change, and Two-Way Aboriginal Schools’. Curriculum Perspectives. Vol. 8, No. 1, pp. 76-92.Google Scholar
Hughes, Paul. 1981. ‘Aboriginal Teachers for Aboriginal Children’ in Bill Menary (ed). Aborigines and Schooling. Adelaide College of the Arts and Education: Adelaide.Google Scholar
James, Claire. 1991. ‘Condemning their children: Occupational inheritance and inheritance of patterns of work-related injury’. Youth Studies. Volume 10, Number 3, pp. 45-48.Google Scholar
Kalantzis, M., Cope, B., Noble, S. and Poynting, S. 1990. Culture of Schooling: Pedagogies for Cultural Difference and Social Access. The Falmer Press: London.Google Scholar
LO Bianco, J. 1990. ‘A Hard-nosed Multiculturalism: Revitalising Multicultural Education!’. In Vox. Vol. 4, pp. 80-94.Google Scholar
Poulson, Chris Japangardi. 1988. ‘The School Curriculum I would Like For My Children’. Curriculum Perspectives. Vol. 8, No. 2, pp. 68-69.Google Scholar
Rogers, Geoffrey R. 1980. ‘Koonibba Aboriginal English: The use of dialect in the classroom and some implications for teachers in West Coast Schools’. Unpublished mimeo.Google Scholar
Wunungmurra, Wali. 1988. ‘Dhawurrpunaramirra: Finding the Common Ground for a New Aboriginal Curriculum’. Curriculum Perspectives. Vol. 8, No. 1, pp. 69-71.Google Scholar