Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T10:41:04.705Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Towards a Composite Educational Research Methodology: Balancing the Authority Equation in Aboriginal Education

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2015

R.G. Smith*
Affiliation:
Maningrida Community Education Centre, Northern Territory
Get access

Extract

In northern Australia Aboriginal ‘settlements’ or communities are, in the main, the product of a variety of west-centric priorities, the needs, for example of missionaries to keep prospective converts conveniently at hand to maintain the pressure of the Christian conversion process or for government agencies to distribute welfare from single accessible locations. The establishment of fixed communities usually brought considerable advantage and power to those mainstream organisations which established them. However, along with some obvious physical benefits for the local people, such as improved access to some of the accruals of west-centric technology and welfare, came a variety of hazards and obstacles to the maintenance of a lifestyle with which local people felt secure and confident.

Type
Section D: Research
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

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

Attwood, Bain (1989) The Making of the Aborigines. St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Bannister Barry, J. (1992) ‘Program analysis as an educational research methodology’. In Darol, Cavanagh and Grant, Rodwell (Eds), Dialogues in Educational Research. Darwin: NTU Printing/Publishing Services, pp. 299317.Google Scholar
Bindarriyi, , Yangarriny, , Mingalpa, , Warlkunji, (1991) ‘Obstacles to Aboriginal pedagogy’. In Symposium, Aboriginal Pedagogy: Aboriginal Teachers Speak Out. Malvern, Vic: Deakin University Press.Google Scholar
Bullivant Brian, M. (1987) The Ethnic Encounter in Secondary Schools — Ethnocultural Reproduction and Resistance; Theory and Case Studies. London: The Falmer Press.Google Scholar
Carmichael, S. and Hamilton, C.V. (1976) Black Power. New York: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Cavanagh, D.M. and Rodwell, G.W. (Eds) (1992) Dialogues in Educational Research. Darwin, NT: NTU Printing/Publishing Services.Google Scholar
Christie, Michael (1985) Aboriginal Perspectives on Experience and Learning: The Role of Language in Aboriginal Education. Malvern, Vic: Deakin University Press.Google Scholar
Cleary, Raymond (1992) ‘Models as an effective research tool’. In Darol, Cavanagh and Grant, Rodwell (Eds), Dialogues in Educational Research. Darwin: NTU Printing/Publishing Services, pp. 117125.Google Scholar
Coombs, H.C. (1990) ‘What happened to self-determination?’ Canberra Times, 21st June, 1990.Google Scholar
Coombs, H.C. (1994) Aboriginal Autonomy, Issues and Strategies. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Degenhardt, Michael (1992) ‘Philosophy, too is always with us: research and the explorations of presupposition’. In Darol, Cavanagh and Grant, Rodwell (Eds), Dialogues in Educational Research. Darwin: NTU Printing/Publishing Service.Google Scholar
Duff, Alan (1993) Maori: The Crisis and the Challenge. Auckland, NZ: Harper Collins.Google Scholar
Eckermann, Anne-Katrin (1994) One Classroom, Many Cultures, Teaching Strategies for Culturally Different Children. St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Eliot, T.S. (1962) Notes Towards the Definition of Culture. London: Faber.Google Scholar
Elliott, David J. (1989) ‘Key concepts in multicultural music education’. International Journal of Music Education 13.Google Scholar
Fisher Darrell, L. (1992) ‘The assessment and change of classroom and school environment’. In Darol, Cavanagh and Grant, Rodwell (Eds), Dialogues in Educational Research. Darwin: NTU Printing/Publishing Services, pp. 221246.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. (1972) The Archaeology of Learning. London.Google Scholar
Frow, John (1995) Cultural Studies and Cultural Value. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Gadamer, Hans-Georg (1965) ‘The historicity of understanding’. Excerpt from Wahrheir und Methode Töbingen: Mohr, J.C.B., reproduced in Paul, Connerton (Ed.) (1976) Critical Sociology. Harmondsworth, UK: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Habermas, Jörgen (1974) Theory and Practice. London: Heinemann. First published in 1963, English translation Beacon Press, 1973.Google Scholar
Henry, John and McTaggart, Robin (1991) ‘Aboriginal teachers’ action research for Aboriginal pedagogy: origins'. In Symposium, Aboriginal Pedagogy: Aboriginal Teachers Speak Out. Malvern, Vic: Deakin University Press.Google Scholar
Jones, Philip (1992) ‘The boomerang's erratic flight: the mutability of ethnographic objects’. In Bain, Attwood and John, Arnold (Eds), Power, Knowledge and Aborigines, a special edition of Journal of Australian Studies. Melbourne, Vic: La Trobe University Press.Google Scholar
Kalantsis, Mary and Cope, Bill (1988) ‘Why we need multicultural education: a review of the “ethnic disadvantage” debate’. The Journal of Intercultural Studies 9(1).Google Scholar
Kukathas, Chandran (1992) ‘Are there any cultural rights?’ Political Theory 20: 105139.Google Scholar
Kwabena Nketia, J.H. (1988) ‘Exploring intercultural dimensions of music in education’. International Music Education XV. Austria: The International Society for Music Education.Google Scholar
Kymlicka, Will (Ed.) (1995) The Rights of Minority Cultures. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lattas, Andrew (1992) ‘Primitivism, nationalism and individualism in Australian popular culture’. In Bain, Attwood and John, Arnold (Eds), Power, Knowledge and Aborigines, a special edition of Journal of Australian Studies. Melbourne, Vic: La Trobe University Press.Google Scholar
Lijphart, Arend (1995) ‘Self-determination versus pre-determination of ethnic minorities in power-sharing systems’. In Will, Kymlicka (Ed.), The Rights of Minority Cultures. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Muecke, Stephen (1992) ‘Lonely representations: Aboriginality and cultural studies’. In Bain, Attwood and John, Arnold (Eds), Power, Knowledge and Aborigines, a special edition of Journal of Australian Studies. Melbourne, Vic: La Trobe University Press.Google Scholar
Rodwell, Grant, W. (1992) ‘Historical research in education’. In Darol, Cavanagh and Grant, Rodwell (Eds), Dialogues in Educational Research. Darwin, NT: NTU Printing/Publishing Services, pp. 89111.Google Scholar
Said, Edward (1978) Orientalism. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Sheridan, Susan (1988) ‘Wives and mothers like ourselves, poor remnants of a dying race: Aborigines in colonial women's writing’. In Anna, Rutherford (Ed.), Aboriginal Culture Today. Sydney, NSW: Dangaroo Press.Google Scholar
Torney, Judith (1972) ‘Middle childhood and international education’. Intercom 71 November.Google Scholar
Torres, Pat (1988) ‘Writing for children, interview with Carolyn Osterhaus’. In Anna, Rutherford (Ed.), Aboriginal Culture Today. Sydney, NSW: Dangaroo Press.Google Scholar
Van Dyke, Vernon (1977) ‘The individual, the state, and ethnic communities in political theory’. Political Theory, World Politics 29(3): 343369.Google Scholar
Walker, R. (1986) ‘Music and multiculturalism’. International Journal of Music Education 8(2): 44.Google Scholar
Wallace, Michele(1990) Invisibility Blues. London.Google Scholar
Welch, Anthony R. (1992) ‘Class, culture and the State in comparative education: problems, perspectives and prospects’. In Darol, Cavanagh and Grant, Rodwell (Eds), Dialogues in Educational Research. Darwin, NT: NTU Printing/Publishing Services, pp. 5788.Google Scholar