The dancing trope of cross-cultural language education policy

  • Oldfield J
  • et al.
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Abstract

The language education policy research based on the views of remote Indigenous communities that is the subject of this paper involved a complex metaphoric dance but one centred on the lead of Aboriginal collaborative research participants. The researchers in this dance, fortunately, had enough experience in traditional Aboriginal decision-making processes and so knew the tilts and sways that ensured the emergence of a reliable picture of remote Indigenous knowledge authority. However, as with most Indigenous research, the de-colonisation process and the use of Indigenous research methods hit a misstep when it came to the academy's ethical procedures and institutional gatekeeping. This almost led to a position from which the research would not recover and from which a contentious but important Indigenous topic on Indigenous language education remained unvoiced.

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Oldfield, J., & Forrester, V. (2018). The dancing trope of cross-cultural language education policy. Learning Communities: International Journal of Learning in Social Contexts, 23, 64–75. https://doi.org/10.18793/lcj2018.23.06

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