Beyond inclusion: Transforming the educational governance relationships between First Nations and school districts in British Columbia

The dissertation is a philosophical and historical investigation of the political and ethical relationships between cultures as they attempt to develop just governance practices in post-colonial educational institutions. It is grounded in 30 years of personal experience and professional practice as...

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Main Author: Robbie, Byron John
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://summit.sfu.ca/item/9185
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spelling ftsimonfu:oai:summit.sfu.ca:9185 2023-05-15T16:15:08+02:00 Beyond inclusion: Transforming the educational governance relationships between First Nations and school districts in British Columbia Robbie, Byron John 2005 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/9185 English eng http://summit.sfu.ca/item/9185 Thesis 2005 ftsimonfu 2022-04-07T18:36:24Z The dissertation is a philosophical and historical investigation of the political and ethical relationships between cultures as they attempt to develop just governance practices in post-colonial educational institutions. It is grounded in 30 years of personal experience and professional practice as an educator in British Columbia. The development of a Community Healing Circle process is initially described as a co-constructed means for the sharing of responsibility for First Nations students in their educational experiences. The Circle is placed within the context of a history of First Nations people of the Cariboo- Chilcotin, primarily after contact with Euro-Canadian society, followed by a consideration of relevant philosophic thought. Charles Taylor's ideas on the politics of recognition, and its relation to identity, forms the theoretical location upon which the dissertation is based. Taylor's 'modern social imaginaries' provides a way of conceptualizing the interaction between Euro-Canadian and First Nations views of today's world. In this way, the forms of difference between 'others' are explored and articulated so the richness of difference can be fully acknowledged. Beyond the investigation of the significant cultural differences and communicative challenges, the dissertation also identifies the ground upon which ethical communication and the building of community capacity can take place. James Tully's work on a 'common ground,' Nancy Fraser's ideas about claims for recognition and redistribution, Jiirgen Habermas' thinking about communicative ethics, and Seyla Benhabib's writings about diversity in the global era, are all interwoven into the fabric of the discussion. Finally, the study returns to a consideration of the Community Healing Circle as a forum in which different cultural partners can engage and contend with each other over substantive educational issues. In the conclusion there are suggestions about how we might proceed to transform the educational governance relationship between First Nations and the dominant polity, creating a more just form. Thesis First Nations Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University)
institution Open Polar
collection Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University)
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language English
description The dissertation is a philosophical and historical investigation of the political and ethical relationships between cultures as they attempt to develop just governance practices in post-colonial educational institutions. It is grounded in 30 years of personal experience and professional practice as an educator in British Columbia. The development of a Community Healing Circle process is initially described as a co-constructed means for the sharing of responsibility for First Nations students in their educational experiences. The Circle is placed within the context of a history of First Nations people of the Cariboo- Chilcotin, primarily after contact with Euro-Canadian society, followed by a consideration of relevant philosophic thought. Charles Taylor's ideas on the politics of recognition, and its relation to identity, forms the theoretical location upon which the dissertation is based. Taylor's 'modern social imaginaries' provides a way of conceptualizing the interaction between Euro-Canadian and First Nations views of today's world. In this way, the forms of difference between 'others' are explored and articulated so the richness of difference can be fully acknowledged. Beyond the investigation of the significant cultural differences and communicative challenges, the dissertation also identifies the ground upon which ethical communication and the building of community capacity can take place. James Tully's work on a 'common ground,' Nancy Fraser's ideas about claims for recognition and redistribution, Jiirgen Habermas' thinking about communicative ethics, and Seyla Benhabib's writings about diversity in the global era, are all interwoven into the fabric of the discussion. Finally, the study returns to a consideration of the Community Healing Circle as a forum in which different cultural partners can engage and contend with each other over substantive educational issues. In the conclusion there are suggestions about how we might proceed to transform the educational governance relationship between First Nations and the dominant polity, creating a more just form.
format Thesis
author Robbie, Byron John
spellingShingle Robbie, Byron John
Beyond inclusion: Transforming the educational governance relationships between First Nations and school districts in British Columbia
author_facet Robbie, Byron John
author_sort Robbie, Byron John
title Beyond inclusion: Transforming the educational governance relationships between First Nations and school districts in British Columbia
title_short Beyond inclusion: Transforming the educational governance relationships between First Nations and school districts in British Columbia
title_full Beyond inclusion: Transforming the educational governance relationships between First Nations and school districts in British Columbia
title_fullStr Beyond inclusion: Transforming the educational governance relationships between First Nations and school districts in British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed Beyond inclusion: Transforming the educational governance relationships between First Nations and school districts in British Columbia
title_sort beyond inclusion: transforming the educational governance relationships between first nations and school districts in british columbia
publishDate 2005
url http://summit.sfu.ca/item/9185
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://summit.sfu.ca/item/9185
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