First Nations Students: What Some Teachers do that Make them Successful

With the European settlement of North America, the education of First Nations children shifted from being carried out in a natural setting by all community members, communicated through observation and trial, and instructed through values, needs, and traditions; to a whole-group learning model found...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Peacock, Robert M., EdD
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Digital USD 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digital.sandiego.edu/dissertations/682
https://doi.org/10.22371/05.2001.013
https://digital.sandiego.edu/context/dissertations/article/1687/viewcontent/2001_Peacock.pdf
id ftunivsandiego:oai:digital.sandiego.edu:dissertations-1687
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivsandiego:oai:digital.sandiego.edu:dissertations-1687 2023-06-11T04:11:42+02:00 First Nations Students: What Some Teachers do that Make them Successful Peacock, Robert M., EdD 2001-04-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://digital.sandiego.edu/dissertations/682 https://doi.org/10.22371/05.2001.013 https://digital.sandiego.edu/context/dissertations/article/1687/viewcontent/2001_Peacock.pdf unknown Digital USD https://digital.sandiego.edu/dissertations/682 doi:10.22371/05.2001.013 https://digital.sandiego.edu/context/dissertations/article/1687/viewcontent/2001_Peacock.pdf Dissertations British Columbia (Canada) children & youth cultural programs curriculum First Nations Leadership studies minority & ethnic groups qualitative teachers text 2001 ftunivsandiego https://doi.org/10.22371/05.2001.013 2023-05-07T16:28:40Z With the European settlement of North America, the education of First Nations children shifted from being carried out in a natural setting by all community members, communicated through observation and trial, and instructed through values, needs, and traditions; to a whole-group learning model founded on a standard curriculum based on successes and failures. For at least the past fifty years First Nations adults have demanded greater control over their children's education. Recently, the Ministry of Education in British Columbia (BC) has advocated for greater success of First Nations students by providing funding for additional support and by increasing the number of First Nations language and cultural programs. Even though the First Nations community and BC politicians want First Nations students to have more success, research illustrates that First Nations students continue to struggle academically. Yet, although research indicates that the person having the greatest impact on student success is the classroom teacher, very little research exists examining teachers who are successful in working with First Nations students. This qualitative study focused on the beliefs and the teaching techniques of six teachers who worked successfully with First Nations students. The teachers were interviewed using Haberman's Star Teacher Selection Interview. Teacher constructs related to the success of First Nations students are arranged into four key attributes: building relationships, the teaching of morality, classroom pedagogy, and teacher preparation. Teachers who work successfully with First Nations students need to build relationships by being cognizant of the environment that both they and their students bring to the classroom; understanding, appreciating, and valuing these students; and integrating First Nations beliefs into the curriculum. They need to view morality as a quality that goes beyond the four classroom walls and be proactive in promoting a holistic approach to nurturing morality. They need to maintain a ... Text First Nations University of San Diego: Digital@USanDiego British Columbia ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of San Diego: Digital@USanDiego
op_collection_id ftunivsandiego
language unknown
topic British Columbia (Canada)
children & youth
cultural programs
curriculum
First Nations
Leadership studies
minority & ethnic groups
qualitative
teachers
spellingShingle British Columbia (Canada)
children & youth
cultural programs
curriculum
First Nations
Leadership studies
minority & ethnic groups
qualitative
teachers
Peacock, Robert M., EdD
First Nations Students: What Some Teachers do that Make them Successful
topic_facet British Columbia (Canada)
children & youth
cultural programs
curriculum
First Nations
Leadership studies
minority & ethnic groups
qualitative
teachers
description With the European settlement of North America, the education of First Nations children shifted from being carried out in a natural setting by all community members, communicated through observation and trial, and instructed through values, needs, and traditions; to a whole-group learning model founded on a standard curriculum based on successes and failures. For at least the past fifty years First Nations adults have demanded greater control over their children's education. Recently, the Ministry of Education in British Columbia (BC) has advocated for greater success of First Nations students by providing funding for additional support and by increasing the number of First Nations language and cultural programs. Even though the First Nations community and BC politicians want First Nations students to have more success, research illustrates that First Nations students continue to struggle academically. Yet, although research indicates that the person having the greatest impact on student success is the classroom teacher, very little research exists examining teachers who are successful in working with First Nations students. This qualitative study focused on the beliefs and the teaching techniques of six teachers who worked successfully with First Nations students. The teachers were interviewed using Haberman's Star Teacher Selection Interview. Teacher constructs related to the success of First Nations students are arranged into four key attributes: building relationships, the teaching of morality, classroom pedagogy, and teacher preparation. Teachers who work successfully with First Nations students need to build relationships by being cognizant of the environment that both they and their students bring to the classroom; understanding, appreciating, and valuing these students; and integrating First Nations beliefs into the curriculum. They need to view morality as a quality that goes beyond the four classroom walls and be proactive in promoting a holistic approach to nurturing morality. They need to maintain a ...
format Text
author Peacock, Robert M., EdD
author_facet Peacock, Robert M., EdD
author_sort Peacock, Robert M., EdD
title First Nations Students: What Some Teachers do that Make them Successful
title_short First Nations Students: What Some Teachers do that Make them Successful
title_full First Nations Students: What Some Teachers do that Make them Successful
title_fullStr First Nations Students: What Some Teachers do that Make them Successful
title_full_unstemmed First Nations Students: What Some Teachers do that Make them Successful
title_sort first nations students: what some teachers do that make them successful
publisher Digital USD
publishDate 2001
url https://digital.sandiego.edu/dissertations/682
https://doi.org/10.22371/05.2001.013
https://digital.sandiego.edu/context/dissertations/article/1687/viewcontent/2001_Peacock.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000)
geographic British Columbia
Canada
geographic_facet British Columbia
Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Dissertations
op_relation https://digital.sandiego.edu/dissertations/682
doi:10.22371/05.2001.013
https://digital.sandiego.edu/context/dissertations/article/1687/viewcontent/2001_Peacock.pdf
op_doi https://doi.org/10.22371/05.2001.013
_version_ 1768386933461876736