South African science teachers' strategies for integrating indigenous and Western knowledges in their classes: Practical lessons in decolonisation

Framed within the broader discourse on decolonising African education, this article aims to contribute to the project of integrating indigenous and Western knowledges in southern African education. Following a participatory action research (PAR) cycle, a team of five South African science teachers a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Educational Research for Social Change 2018-06, Vol.7 (spe), p.91-110
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description Framed within the broader discourse on decolonising African education, this article aims to contribute to the project of integrating indigenous and Western knowledges in southern African education. Following a participatory action research (PAR) cycle, a team of five South African science teachers and one German researcher explored whether and how indigenous knowledges (IK) could be integrated into the teachers' regular classes. The article focuses on the first two phases of the PAR cycle and discusses how challenges impeding knowledge integration were solved and how science lessons that integrated aspects of Western and indigenous knowledges were planned. While the South African science curriculum explicitly invites knowledge integration, it hardly contains any IK and there are no generally available teaching materials. Moreover, some of the participating teachers did not have IK. Yet, integration was possible, for example, through using the learners' communities as resources, a strategy that worked well in both primary and secondary grades. The article suggests that the very practice-oriented research process was also a process of intellectual empowerment and decolonisation. Calling on the agency of teachers, parents, community elders, traditional healers, and academics, the article argues for a bottom-up approach to knowledge integration and to decolonising education.
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subjects Academic staff
Action research
African literature
Classes
Collaboration
Colonialism
Core curriculum
Curricula
Data Analysis
Decolonization
Education & Educational Research
Educational materials
Educational Practices
Empowerment
Humanities, Multidisciplinary
Indigenous peoples
Knowledge
Native peoples
Older people
Participatory action research
Research methodology
Science Curriculum
Science education
Science teachers
Secondary Education
Teachers
Teaching
Teams
Traditional healers
title South African science teachers' strategies for integrating indigenous and Western knowledges in their classes: Practical lessons in decolonisation
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