Abstract
Across international contexts many young people from Indigenous cultural groups continue to experience a Western, conventional form of schooling as alienating, dispiriting, and inequitable. Culturally responsive practice by teachers and school leaders has been posited as a promising pedagogical framework for creating positive learning contexts to mitigate these challenges. In this chapter, the authors draw together sociocultural theory and Indigenous epistemological frameworks, as well as their own scholarly and personal experiences, in order to critically examine the conceptual and praxis landscape of culturally responsive teacher education within Indigenous contexts. It is argued that educators who choose to firmly encounter these initiatives will be motivated to revise old conclusions and reenvision an authentic, culturally inclusive future.
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Fickel, L.H., Macfarlane, S., Macfarlane, A.H. (2017). Culturally Responsive Practice for Indigenous Contexts: Provenance to Potential. In: Reid, C., Major, J. (eds) Global Teaching. Education Dialogues with/in the Global South. Palgrave Macmillan, New York. https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-52526-0_6
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