There is an increasing recognition that computing education and the profession of computing has failed indigenous learners around the world. In this paper we argue for a reform of tertiary education's computing curricula so that they address the needs of both indigenous and non-indigenous learners. To achieve this, we must first consider the role of computing as a negative colonising force that continues to the present. This paper integrates traditional methods of storytelling to provide context for a reframing of computing as a decolonising force. A case study of the New Zealand context where Mori have been underserved by both computing education and the computing profession, is used to identify systemic barriers. We propose a process of partnership that empowers indigenous communities to work with industry and education to imagine a computing profession that positively contributes to thriving decolonised practice. And then how can computer science education contribute to that? We then canvas some potential directions a transformation of computing education might take. This paper is not intended to replace or pre-empt partnerships or indigenous self-determination, but to inspire computer science educators towards developing an approach that improves outcomes for all learners.
CITATION STYLE
Karetai, M., Mann, S., Guruge, D. D., Licorish, S., & Clear, A. (2023). Decolonising Computer Science Education - A Global Perspective. In SIGCSE 2023 - Proceedings of the 54th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education (Vol. 1, pp. 1097β1102). Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/3545945.3569870
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