Categories: News

Could two-way learning close the gap?

<p>Bill &OpenCurlyQuote;Swampy’ Marsh’s released a 2016 addition to his <em><i>Outback Stories <&sol;i><&sol;em>series&comma; <em><i><a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;harpercollins&period;com&period;au&sol;9780733333156&sol;&num;sm&period;000008271fxgrf0rpyc2600ovx83j">Great Australian Outback Teaching Stories<&sol;a>&period; <&sol;i><&sol;em> Tales abound of fly-in-fly-out teaching appointments &lpar;fly in at the beginning and out at the end that is&rpar;&comma; young male teachers required to instruct on breastfeeding&comma; one shed schools in the middle of paddocks&comma; and actually&comma; there were a few <em><i>no<&sol;i><&sol;em> shed schools…Entertainment aside&comma; teachers experienced transformative interludes on the sunburnt plains&comma; the dusty outcrops and the marshy seasonal prison of the top end&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>2013 documentary <em><i>First Footprints<&sol;i><&sol;em> illustrated the complexity of the ancient mental water-map passed down through the desert tribes of Australia&comma; a road-map to survival in one of the driest places on earth – a roadmap that many lost explorers might have appreciated&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Batchelor College educates students through two way or both-ways learning&period; In his 1990 book <em><i>Two-way Aboriginal schooling&colon; education and cultural survival<&sol;i><&sol;em> Stephen Harris referred to the practice as &OpenCurlyQuote;drawing on two necessarily separate domains of knowledge’&period; Australian National University website <a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;livingknowledge&period;anu&period;edu&period;au">www&period;livingknowledge&period;anu&period;edu&period;au<&sol;a> states that &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;more recently&comma; the terms &OpenCurlyQuote;two-way learning’ and &OpenCurlyQuote;both-ways learning&&num;8217&semi; have come to indicate the acceptance of a mixing of western and Indigenous knowledge”&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In our last Indigenous Education article&comma; we quoted Batchelor student Amelia Kunoth-Monks&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote>&NewLine;<p>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;More kids would go&comma; and parents would be encouraging them to go to school&comma; if the lessons were more relevant&comma; taught in both languages with a strong focus on our culture” and &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;having both-ways and the two cultures there&comma; is absolutely amazing&comma; rather than being at school and feeling like you’re not really wanted in society”&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p>For all the energy spent on trying to &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;close the gap” and &OpenCurlyQuote;fix the problems’ with Indigenous students’ performance within a European dominated culture&comma; it seems Batchelor College may have closed the gap for Amelia by &OpenCurlyQuote;speaking her language’&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So back to the book… Apart from fleeting perfunctory inspections&comma; teachers on their own&comma; at liberty to appraise their <em><i>actual situation and their actual students<&sol;i><&sol;em> for clues on how to teach them&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In the story titled &OpenCurlyQuote;Back from the Dead’&comma; a teacher stationed at Ti Tree School in the Northern Territory instinctively&comma; albeit passively&comma; applied two-way learning&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Teaching the upper level meant that the elders would call students out of class for necessary cultural learning&comma; like stories&comma; hunting&comma; tracking&comma; and bush tucker&period;  This teacher sat down with the elders and suggested that he call every Friday &OpenCurlyQuote;Cultural Studies’&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>After that&comma; Fridays involved empty classes or a couple of kids who weren’t ready for the knowledge&period; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;By the end of the second term I was allowed to go to some of their cultural days and that was a real privilege” the story continued&period; <&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Yes&period; That was a real privilege&comma; and it seems quite likely one that wouldn’t have been available to him&comma; had he privileged the education department curriculum’s over their elders’ own &OpenCurlyQuote;cultural curriculum’&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I quote from <a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;rightnow&period;org&period;au&sol;opinion-3&sol;when-the-object-teaches-indigenous-academics-in-australian-universities&sol;">an opinion article published on www&period;rightnow&period;com&period;au<&sol;a>&comma; a website dedicated to human rights in Australia&period; Munanjahli and South Sea Islander academic&comma; Dr Chelsea Bond wrote on the complexities of being an Indigenous academic in her article titled&colon; &OpenCurlyQuote;When the object teaches&colon; Indigenous academics in Australian universities’&period; In that context&comma; she referred to &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;how race&comma; racism and whiteness are operationalised in teaching and learning environments”&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In a journal article titled&colon; <a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;tandfonline&period;com&sol;doi&sol;abs&sol;10&period;1080&sol;13613320902995475">&OpenCurlyQuote;The unexamined whiteness of teaching…”&comma; in <em><i>Race Ethnicity and Education<&sol;i><&sol;em>&comma; Bree Picower<&sol;a> defines this as the lack of awareness about racial identity that comes with being the &OpenCurlyQuote;default’ race&period; The invisibility of the dominant culture&comma; she argues&comma; results in an &OpenCurlyQuote;operationalising’ effect of race&period; Within a school setting&comma; this might affect educational themes&comma; methods&comma; and expectations&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I would argue that this extends to policy making&comma; where an arguable Euro-centricity prevails&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In a paper titled <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;questia&period;com&sol;library&sol;journal&sol;1G1-269531650&sol;literacy-learning-what-works-for-young-indigenous">&OpenCurlyQuote;Literacy Learning&colon; What works for young Indigenous students&quest;<&sol;a>’&comma; Buckley et al&period; describe a narrow view of literacy that &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;focuses exclusively on the ability to read and write and does not acknowledge the way in which literacy development is embedded in a social and cultural context”&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote>&NewLine;<p>They assert that viewing Indigenous cultures as &OpenCurlyQuote;pre-literate’ disregards a more appropriate definition of literacy from an Indigenous perspective&semi; one that &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;encompasses the language and literacy practices of Indigenous culture that are traditionally oral and visual”&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p>Could awareness of this cultural difference inform an entirely different approach to literacy with Indigenous students&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;ab-ed&period;bostes&period;nsw&period;edu&period;au&sol;go&sol;aboriginal-english&sol;using-a-two-way-or-intercultural-approach">The NSW Board of Studies &lpar;BOSTES&rpar; website<&sol;a> suggested that using a two-way or intercultural approach can assist in helping students identify with literacy resources<em><i>&period; <&sol;i><&sol;em>Through using a two-way approach&comma; the web page continues&comma; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;they can then design their classroom activities to both accommodate these cultural differences and to scaffold Australian English literacy and cultural literacy for their students&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 2007&comma; The Western Australian Department of Education released a video series called <em><a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;det&period;wa&period;edu&period;au&sol;aboriginaleducation&sol;detcms&sol;aboriginal-education&sol;aboriginal-education&sol;docs&sol;ways-of-being-ways-of-talk&period;en&quest;oid&equals;com&period;arsdigita&period;cms&period;contenttypes&period;FileStorageItem-id-7146860&percnt;20"><i>Ways of Being&comma; Ways of Talk<&sol;i><&sol;a>&period; <&sol;em>One video recommends we &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;acknowledge and celebrate the diversity of linguistic and cultural diversity that we have within our educational context&comma; but use them as a kind of resource to our benefit&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The video also emphasised the value of cultivating what we know about the cultures of Indigenous students for use in lesson design and classroom management&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When educators are supported to acknowledge the value of Indigenous cultures&comma; consultative and shared approaches to learning become possible&period; Sources included in this article indicated that &OpenCurlyQuote;interculturalising’ education could result in a far richer&comma; more equitable&comma; and reciprocally formative experience&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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Suzy Barry

Suzy Barry is a freelance education writer and the former editor of School News, Australia.

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