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Articles

Conversations on cultural sustainability: stimuli for embedding Indigenous knowledges and ways of being into curriculum

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Pages 1311-1325 | Received 07 Sep 2016, Accepted 27 Mar 2017, Published online: 24 May 2017
 

ABSTRACT

While Australian higher education agendas and literature prioritise Indigenous knowledges and perspectives across policy, curriculum and pedagogy, enacting this in practice remains problematic and contentious. Often the result is the inclusion of simplified Indigenous knowledges, rather than sustained engagement with and embedding of multiple and ‘messy’ ontological and epistemological positions. This paper explores ways of engaging with this ‘messiness’. Taking messiness as a focal point within our own context of teacher education at a regional university, this agenda and tension inform an ongoing dialogue about ways of assuring a conscious approach to cultural sustainability to embed, value and foreground Indigenous knowledges and ways of being and doing in curriculum. This endeavour can be conceptualised as a heuristic project, an ongoing conversation in response to multiple stimuli rather than a fixed endpoint or framework. In response to this exploration, this paper presents the stimuli for our conversation: situated, plural and reflexive knowledges that work together in inherently relational ways to nourish the cultural sustainability of Indigenous knowledges.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Dr Felicia Watkin Lui for guidance on an earlier draft of this paper.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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