Aboriginal Student Persistence and Success in Ontario Colleges
This study relies on a mixed method research approach with a focus on qualitative research including open-ended, semi-structured interviews at Aboriginal Resource Centres in three colleges in Ontario. Interviews were conducted with 31 participants engaged with Aboriginal Resource Centres, including...
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ftunivtoronto:oai:localhost:1807/68590 2023-05-15T13:28:57+02:00 Aboriginal Student Persistence and Success in Ontario Colleges Hinds, Christa Dawn Iacovino Charles, Pascal Leadership, Higher and Adult Education 2015-04-24T20:01:31Z http://hdl.handle.net/1807/68590 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/1807/68590 Aboriginal Aboriginal student enrollment Aboriginal student success College Indigenous education native education 0745 Thesis 2015 ftunivtoronto 2020-06-17T11:55:13Z This study relies on a mixed method research approach with a focus on qualitative research including open-ended, semi-structured interviews at Aboriginal Resource Centres in three colleges in Ontario. Interviews were conducted with 31 participants engaged with Aboriginal Resource Centres, including Aboriginal students, staff and Elders. Participants spoke about their interactions with the Ontario college system including their positive and negative experiences. The research process is also informed by an in-depth analysis of various studies and reports regarding Aboriginal peoples, education and enrolment statistics from the 24 Ontario colleges. The overall data analysis and interpretation includes insight from all of these data sources. The research is guided by a two-eyed seeing approach (Iwama, Marshall, Marshall, Barlett, 2009) that respects a combination of Western and Aboriginal worldviews; however, a concerted effort has been made to honour Indigenous paradigms thus, at times, this minimizes the inclusion of traditional Euro-centric views and methodology. Nevertheless, parallels were drawn between Euro-centric student development and engagement theories and Indigenous paradigms to provide insight into how postsecondary institutions can support Aboriginal students and create a safe and welcoming environment on campus for all Aboriginal peoples. An Ojibwe Anishinabe Elder recognized by her community provided guidance throughout the research process. She allies with students connecting them to traditional protocols and shares authentic Indigenous teachings. Further, to respect the place of Aboriginal voices, a collection of Elder reflections describes a vision for Aboriginal education, and specifically postsecondary education.The conclusions drawn from the study suggest that many colleges in Canada, and Ontario, are helping Aboriginal students obtain a postsecondary credential. Colleges are creating a supportive and welcoming environment and Aboriginal Resource Centres are helping students connect with their communities, institutions and Aboriginal cultures. In spite of this success, many Aboriginal students do not reach postsecondary education. Many Aboriginal students are not engaging with these centres and Aboriginal peoples continue to experience racism on campus. The findings indicate that true collaboration and meaningful consultation with Aboriginal communities is needed to "Indigenize" the campuses. Ph.D. Thesis anishina* University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space Canada |
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University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space |
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Aboriginal Aboriginal student enrollment Aboriginal student success College Indigenous education native education 0745 |
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Aboriginal Aboriginal student enrollment Aboriginal student success College Indigenous education native education 0745 Hinds, Christa Dawn Iacovino Aboriginal Student Persistence and Success in Ontario Colleges |
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Aboriginal Aboriginal student enrollment Aboriginal student success College Indigenous education native education 0745 |
description |
This study relies on a mixed method research approach with a focus on qualitative research including open-ended, semi-structured interviews at Aboriginal Resource Centres in three colleges in Ontario. Interviews were conducted with 31 participants engaged with Aboriginal Resource Centres, including Aboriginal students, staff and Elders. Participants spoke about their interactions with the Ontario college system including their positive and negative experiences. The research process is also informed by an in-depth analysis of various studies and reports regarding Aboriginal peoples, education and enrolment statistics from the 24 Ontario colleges. The overall data analysis and interpretation includes insight from all of these data sources. The research is guided by a two-eyed seeing approach (Iwama, Marshall, Marshall, Barlett, 2009) that respects a combination of Western and Aboriginal worldviews; however, a concerted effort has been made to honour Indigenous paradigms thus, at times, this minimizes the inclusion of traditional Euro-centric views and methodology. Nevertheless, parallels were drawn between Euro-centric student development and engagement theories and Indigenous paradigms to provide insight into how postsecondary institutions can support Aboriginal students and create a safe and welcoming environment on campus for all Aboriginal peoples. An Ojibwe Anishinabe Elder recognized by her community provided guidance throughout the research process. She allies with students connecting them to traditional protocols and shares authentic Indigenous teachings. Further, to respect the place of Aboriginal voices, a collection of Elder reflections describes a vision for Aboriginal education, and specifically postsecondary education.The conclusions drawn from the study suggest that many colleges in Canada, and Ontario, are helping Aboriginal students obtain a postsecondary credential. Colleges are creating a supportive and welcoming environment and Aboriginal Resource Centres are helping students connect with their communities, institutions and Aboriginal cultures. In spite of this success, many Aboriginal students do not reach postsecondary education. Many Aboriginal students are not engaging with these centres and Aboriginal peoples continue to experience racism on campus. The findings indicate that true collaboration and meaningful consultation with Aboriginal communities is needed to "Indigenize" the campuses. Ph.D. |
author2 |
Charles, Pascal Leadership, Higher and Adult Education |
format |
Thesis |
author |
Hinds, Christa Dawn Iacovino |
author_facet |
Hinds, Christa Dawn Iacovino |
author_sort |
Hinds, Christa Dawn Iacovino |
title |
Aboriginal Student Persistence and Success in Ontario Colleges |
title_short |
Aboriginal Student Persistence and Success in Ontario Colleges |
title_full |
Aboriginal Student Persistence and Success in Ontario Colleges |
title_fullStr |
Aboriginal Student Persistence and Success in Ontario Colleges |
title_full_unstemmed |
Aboriginal Student Persistence and Success in Ontario Colleges |
title_sort |
aboriginal student persistence and success in ontario colleges |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1807/68590 |
geographic |
Canada |
geographic_facet |
Canada |
genre |
anishina* |
genre_facet |
anishina* |
op_relation |
http://hdl.handle.net/1807/68590 |
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1765997508964646912 |