Exposing the patterns of statistical blindness: Centring Indigenous standpoints on student identity, motivation, and future aspirations
© 2017, © Australian Council for Educational Research 2017. This article engages with an Indigenous Quantitative Methodological Framework to examine links between a positive sense of cultural identity, future aspirations, and academic motivational tendencies. Utilising a sample of Aboriginal, non-Ab...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
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Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | unknown |
Published: |
2017
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10453/123601 |
_version_ | 1821514569299787776 |
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author | Bodkin-Andrews, G Whittaker, A Harrison, N Craven, R Parker, P Trudgett, M Page, S |
author_facet | Bodkin-Andrews, G Whittaker, A Harrison, N Craven, R Parker, P Trudgett, M Page, S |
author_sort | Bodkin-Andrews, G |
collection | University of Technology Sydney: OPUS - Open Publications of UTS Scholars |
description | © 2017, © Australian Council for Educational Research 2017. This article engages with an Indigenous Quantitative Methodological Framework to examine links between a positive sense of cultural identity, future aspirations, and academic motivational tendencies. Utilising a sample of Aboriginal, non-Aboriginal and First Generation (Migrant) Australian students in years 7–10, results showed strong psychometric properties across the three groups for the measures utilised. Whilst few differences were identified between the First Generation and non-Aboriginal Australian students, Aboriginal students consistently had lower future aspirations and less adaptive motivational tendencies than the two other student groups. Importantly though, Aboriginal students held a stronger sense of cultural identity. Key links between motivation and cultural identity were identified, and both were associated with stronger educational and life aspirations. The implications suggest that researchers and teachers need to recognise the importance of cultural identity as a positive driver for schooling motivation and future aspirations, and that First Nations theory and research should be engaged to override the erasing effects of Western epistemological standpoints when utilising statistical methods. |
format | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
genre | First Nations |
genre_facet | First Nations |
id | ftunivtsydney:oai:opus.lib.uts.edu.au:10453/123601 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | unknown |
op_collection_id | ftunivtsydney |
op_relation | Australian Journal of Education 10.1177/0004944117731360 Australian Journal of Education, 2017, 61 (3), pp. 225 - 249 0004-9441 http://hdl.handle.net/10453/123601 |
publishDate | 2017 |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftunivtsydney:oai:opus.lib.uts.edu.au:10453/123601 2025-01-16T21:56:10+00:00 Exposing the patterns of statistical blindness: Centring Indigenous standpoints on student identity, motivation, and future aspirations Bodkin-Andrews, G Whittaker, A Harrison, N Craven, R Parker, P Trudgett, M Page, S 2017-11-01 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10453/123601 unknown Australian Journal of Education 10.1177/0004944117731360 Australian Journal of Education, 2017, 61 (3), pp. 225 - 249 0004-9441 http://hdl.handle.net/10453/123601 Education Journal Article 2017 ftunivtsydney 2022-03-13T13:36:17Z © 2017, © Australian Council for Educational Research 2017. This article engages with an Indigenous Quantitative Methodological Framework to examine links between a positive sense of cultural identity, future aspirations, and academic motivational tendencies. Utilising a sample of Aboriginal, non-Aboriginal and First Generation (Migrant) Australian students in years 7–10, results showed strong psychometric properties across the three groups for the measures utilised. Whilst few differences were identified between the First Generation and non-Aboriginal Australian students, Aboriginal students consistently had lower future aspirations and less adaptive motivational tendencies than the two other student groups. Importantly though, Aboriginal students held a stronger sense of cultural identity. Key links between motivation and cultural identity were identified, and both were associated with stronger educational and life aspirations. The implications suggest that researchers and teachers need to recognise the importance of cultural identity as a positive driver for schooling motivation and future aspirations, and that First Nations theory and research should be engaged to override the erasing effects of Western epistemological standpoints when utilising statistical methods. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations University of Technology Sydney: OPUS - Open Publications of UTS Scholars |
spellingShingle | Education Bodkin-Andrews, G Whittaker, A Harrison, N Craven, R Parker, P Trudgett, M Page, S Exposing the patterns of statistical blindness: Centring Indigenous standpoints on student identity, motivation, and future aspirations |
title | Exposing the patterns of statistical blindness: Centring Indigenous standpoints on student identity, motivation, and future aspirations |
title_full | Exposing the patterns of statistical blindness: Centring Indigenous standpoints on student identity, motivation, and future aspirations |
title_fullStr | Exposing the patterns of statistical blindness: Centring Indigenous standpoints on student identity, motivation, and future aspirations |
title_full_unstemmed | Exposing the patterns of statistical blindness: Centring Indigenous standpoints on student identity, motivation, and future aspirations |
title_short | Exposing the patterns of statistical blindness: Centring Indigenous standpoints on student identity, motivation, and future aspirations |
title_sort | exposing the patterns of statistical blindness: centring indigenous standpoints on student identity, motivation, and future aspirations |
topic | Education |
topic_facet | Education |
url | http://hdl.handle.net/10453/123601 |