What will be Required of Us? Teacher Activists Theorizing Justice on Stolen Land

Datum

2022-02-18

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Verlag

University of Oregon

Zusammenfassung

This work is about about how we can heal from settler colonialism. Education is often thought of as the answer to social problems (as Nelson Mandela said, “Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world”). In the context of the US nation-state such liberatory claims are undermined by the weaponization of schooling for purposes of assimilation of peoples and elimination of cultures. Within their classrooms, in the halls of government, and in the streets, teacher activists are fighting against oppressive and violent schooling practices and for students, for democracy, and for the very future of all of us on Turtle Island. Teacher activist identity formation is not well understood, nor is the role of activist collectives in the nurturing of new activists, so this study asks teacher activists to reflect on the ways they became activists and how they have tried to spark new teachers to become activists. A small group of non-Native activists formed a Teacher Inquiry Group (TIG) to consider these questions and also to wrestle with the concept of decolonization of teacher activism, and the possibilities of working with Native education activists to envision a future in which education contributes to self-determination for individuals and for all peoples. The results of our work together point not to one definitive answer; there is no “how to” pamphlet for decolonizing teacher activist work. Instead, we unveil additional questions that might need to be addressed before we can begin to envision a more just and sustainable future for all.

Beschreibung

Schlagwörter

Indigenous Feminism, liberatory democracy, radical futurities, teacher activism

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