Skip to main content

Intersections of Feminist and Indigenous Pedagogies

   


     In thinking about innovation as an ethical practice, an article by Martin (2003) regarding feminist educational theory is offered for our reflection.   The argument being explored in this paper relates to the ethics scholars, especially feminists hoping to preserve and pass on important innovations in feminist scholarship, have in critiquing each others work.  Martin (2003) is responding to Thompson’s criticism of her large body of feminist educational theory, and she challenges Thompson to take a broad view, encouraging her responsibility to have a “welcoming spirit”, being “engaged in a collective enterprise” together as feminist scholars. She suggests that rather than misinterpreting her work as “essentialism”, Thompson could offer critique by “filling in the gaps in other women’s research” (p. 76) and giving constructive criticism (p. 76), rather than “demanding perfection” (p.76), noting that male scholars are often given much more generosity. 

 



Dr. Jane Roland Martin (Ketchum, 2018)

Video below about her life by (Tucker, 2020).


            It seems that Martin (2003) has a more collectivist view of teaching and learning than Thompson who may have been focused on individualistic and competitive values. This reminds me of more collectivist Indigenous informed ways of teaching and learning, where harmony and working together to co-create knowledge is valued. 

 


Dr. Christopher Horsethief (2021)
See: https://www.christopherhorsethief.com/

 

As Ktunaxa scholar Dr. Christopher Horsethief explains in his video From Awkward Kid to Awkward Father: Parenting Post-colonization (2017) “for us learning is not about putting things in our head. For us learning is about putting things in our heart. All our words to do with learning and concentration are about putting information into your heart.”   He describes how Ktunaxa problem solving is a reciprocal, collective activity where people gather in a circle so they can see each other, understand each other’s feelings and feel a sense of trust, so that they are “one heart working together”. They create a common understanding through collective offering, co-constructing knowledge in harmony with one another. In many Indigenous societies, which are often more egalitarian rather than based on top down, hierarchical power structures, there is a valuing of relationship and community over individualism, which seems to be similar to the ethic which Martin (2003) is trying to promote. 

    In my own teaching practice I am wondering how we begin to appreciate and cultivate more collectivist notions of teaching and learning, valuing of relationships within such a hierarchical, individualistic system?  How do we bring rigor and constructive critique into our practice, while maintaining strong caring relationships rooted in harmony, respect, love and truth?  As well, it makes me reflect on notions of assessment, which can often be quite critical and create defensiveness and a negative sense of failure.  How can we reframe learning as an ongoing process of endless growth, where there is no expectation of perfection?

 

References

Horsethief, C. P. (2017). From awkward kid to awkward father: 

     Parenting post-colonization. [video]. TEDx Nelson; Nelson, 

     BC. https://vimeo.com/249222853/3c2e6533b1

Horsethief, C.P. (2021) Dr. Christopher Horsethief [image] 

https://www.christopherhorsethief.com/

Ketchum, (2018) Dr. Jane Roland Martin. [image]


Ketchum, C. (2018) Dr. Jane Roland Martin [image]
           https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Roland_Martin#/media/File:Jane_Roland_Martin_(July_20,_1929-),_photo_by_Charles_Ketcham,_CC_4.0_rights_granted_by_Joyce_Ketcham.jpg

Martin, J. R. (2003). What should we do with a feminist educational 

     theory when we have one? A response to Audrey 

    Thompson. Curriculum Inquiry, 33(1), 67-77. 

    doi: 10.1111/1467-873X.00250

Tucker, Tres (2020, Feb. 4) Jane Roland Martin. 

     youtube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D7_Wm0Ph4R0

Comments

  1. Response from Colleague on this Blog Post:
    Hi Melanie,
    Thank you for offering your thoughts on this interesting article; I truly appreciate how you connected the ideas presented by Martin to some of the Indigenous ways and principles that have been the focus of this week. I would like to add to your thinking and connection by offering a quote from one of the articles I read, with respect to story-telling as a de-colonizing practice. Smith, (2012) writes, the "collective quality of stories enables connections: the story and the storyteller both serve to connect past with future, one generation with the other, the land to the people, and the people to the story" (Smith, p. 146, as cited in Louis et al., 2017). It is the collection of stories that create culture and understanding, rather than an individual's. I appreciate the perspective that women could be thought of in a similar way, growth and learning comes from the diversity of the stories together.
    As a response to your final questions, I have recently been exploring the practice of 'ungrading', which attempts to address your thoughts on assessment. "Ungrading is a form of "grading for growth" in that the primary purpose of the assessment is to help students learn and improve their knowledge and skills, rather than to create a summative score that students use to compare themselves against an external credential" (Kenyon, 2022). I do think we have some far- reaching systemic challenges to cope with however, to succeed down this path-- such as articulation and entry requirements for further educational pursuits. Must start somewhere, though, right?
    ~ Karin
    References
    Kenyon, A. (2022). What is Ungrading? Duke Learning, Innovation & Lifetime Learning. Retrieved on June 7, 2024 https://learninginnovation.duke.edu/blog/2022/09/what-is-ungrading/#:~:text=Ungrading%20is%20a%20practice%20which,to%20the%20course%20learning%20goals.
    Louie, D. W., Poitras-Pratt, Y., Hanson, A. J., & Ottmann, J. (2017). Applying indigenizing principles of decolonizing methodologies in university classrooms. Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 47(3), 16–33. https:// doi.org/10.7202/1043236ar
    Blog Post 7 : Professional and Personal Learning Network

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Reflecting on Bell's Teaching By the Medicine Wheel

  Medicine Wheel Image (Littlejohn657, 2021) As I reflect on Indigenous perspectives on teaching and learning, coming to the end of my two year journey into Indigenous Education, it seems appropriate to revisit Bell’s (2014) article Teaching by the Medicine Wheel which discusses an Anishinaabe perspective on Medicine Wheels as pedagogical tools, using her experience at the Anishinaabe Bimaadiziwin Cultural Healing and Learning Program to help us understand .  In the article, Bell discusses the diversity of Medicine Wheel teachings throughout Turtle Island, and talks about some of their shared commonalities which can be helpful for all teachers to understand.  In many ways it feels appropriate to complete this circle, and reflect upon this article with new understanding, while exploring Indigenous perspectives of teaching, learning, creativity and innovation.    One essential commonality of Medicine Wheels noted by Bell (2014) is that they “transmit a common ...

Reflecting on Chrona's Wayi Wah! Indigenous Pedagogies – An Act for Reconciliation and Anti-Racist Education (2023)

                                                              Cover Image (Chrona, 2023)        Wayi Wah! Indigenous Pedagogies – An Act for Reconciliation and Anti-Racist Education is written by Jo Chrona, an Indigenous educator from the Kitsumkalum (Tsimshian) and Gitsegula (Gitxsan) First Nations on the West Coast of BC.  The book deeply explores important concepts such as how to learn in a good way, knowing we will make mistakes and having the courage to be the discomfort that is needed to start learning about anti-racism.   She explores different aspects of racism, and how to examine our own bias and assumptions.   She skillfully presents a model representing the progression of   “Becoming Anti-Racist in Canada”(p.60) which begins in fear, separation and denial and moves through a l...

Learning Glossary - Teaching, Learning, Creativity and Innovation

  Learning Glossary - Teaching, Learning, Creativity and Innovation   Creativity:             Creativity is like a positive spark.   In Bell’s (2014) Anishinaabe Medicine Wheel teachings, creativity is “vision” which is associated with spirituality and wholeness. Creativity is part of the ongoing process of teaching and learning we are all engaged in through living and being together. Creativity brings us together in new ways with fresh perspectives, helping us to better understand how to live together in a good way. There are various forms of creativity and these are emphasized or cultivated differently in diverse cultures around the world, however creativity is a universal human quality. Innovation:             Innovation is the application of creativity, with the added element of wisdom, to create something of value.   On a basic level it is taking...