Technological_Curriculum & culture

This article explores First Nations (Native American) science education from a cultural perspective. Science is recognized as a subculture of Western culture. Scientific and Aboriginal ideas about nature are contrasted. Learning science is viewed as culture acquisition that requires First Nations st...

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Main Author: Dharmadhikary, Vasant
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11295/16073
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spelling ftunivnairobi:oai:http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke:11295/16073 2023-05-15T16:15:06+02:00 Technological_Curriculum & culture Dharmadhikary, Vasant 2008 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11295/16073 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/11295/16073 Article 2008 ftunivnairobi 2022-12-28T09:35:23Z This article explores First Nations (Native American) science education from a cultural perspective. Science is recognized as a subculture of Western culture. Scientific and Aboriginal ideas about nature are contrasted. Learning science is viewed as culture acquisition that requires First Nations students to cross a cultural border from their everyday world into the subculture of science. The pathway toward the cross-cultural education explored in the article is: (1) founded on empirical studies in educational anthropology; (2) directed by the goals of First Nations people themselves; (3) illuminated by a reconceptualization of science teaching as cultural transmission; (4) guided by a cross-cultural STS science and technology curriculum; and (5) grounded in various types of content knowledge (common sense, technology, and science) for the purpose of practical action such as economic development, environmental responsibility, and cultural survival. Cross-cultural instruction requires teachers to identify cultural border crossings for students and to facilitate those border crossings by playing the role of tour guide, travel agent, or culture broker, while sustaining the validity of students’ own culturally constructed ways of knowing Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations University of Nairobi Digital Repository
institution Open Polar
collection University of Nairobi Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftunivnairobi
language English
description This article explores First Nations (Native American) science education from a cultural perspective. Science is recognized as a subculture of Western culture. Scientific and Aboriginal ideas about nature are contrasted. Learning science is viewed as culture acquisition that requires First Nations students to cross a cultural border from their everyday world into the subculture of science. The pathway toward the cross-cultural education explored in the article is: (1) founded on empirical studies in educational anthropology; (2) directed by the goals of First Nations people themselves; (3) illuminated by a reconceptualization of science teaching as cultural transmission; (4) guided by a cross-cultural STS science and technology curriculum; and (5) grounded in various types of content knowledge (common sense, technology, and science) for the purpose of practical action such as economic development, environmental responsibility, and cultural survival. Cross-cultural instruction requires teachers to identify cultural border crossings for students and to facilitate those border crossings by playing the role of tour guide, travel agent, or culture broker, while sustaining the validity of students’ own culturally constructed ways of knowing
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Dharmadhikary, Vasant
spellingShingle Dharmadhikary, Vasant
Technological_Curriculum & culture
author_facet Dharmadhikary, Vasant
author_sort Dharmadhikary, Vasant
title Technological_Curriculum & culture
title_short Technological_Curriculum & culture
title_full Technological_Curriculum & culture
title_fullStr Technological_Curriculum & culture
title_full_unstemmed Technological_Curriculum & culture
title_sort technological_curriculum & culture
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/11295/16073
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11295/16073
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