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Indigenist Research Practices to Support Indigenous Pre-Service Teaching Praxis

Susan Whatman (Griffith University, Australia)
Juliana McLaughlin (Queensland University of Technology, Australia)

Researching Practices Across and Within Diverse Educational Sites: Onto-epistemological Considerations

ISBN: 978-1-80071-872-2, eISBN: 978-1-80071-871-5

Publication date: 6 November 2023

Abstract

This chapter focusses on the research methodology of the completed project, drawing on what Martin (2008) described as ‘Indigenist’ research traditions or practices. The project drew upon tenets of critical race theory which developed over the life of a university teaching and learning project to support the praxis of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander, or Indigenous,1 pre-service teachers on their final internships prior to graduating.

The broader project was conceptualised and framed within our prioritisation of Indigenist standpoint and critical race theory. Our project was designed to amplify the perspectives and voices of Indigenous students in situations where White, hegemonic relations appeared to constrain their potential achievement on practicum in socially unjust and often racist ways. Research into the achievement and success of Indigenous education graduates in Australia is dominated by non-Indigenous reporting, framed in deficit language of Indigenous ‘underachievement’, ‘barriers’, ‘lack’, and ‘disengagement’, rather than from their experience of injustice in their professional preparation as teachers.

The research design troubled how researchers like us ‘come to know’ Indigenous achievement in the higher education sector through the pre-service teachers’ words, impelling us to listen to stories of discrimination, rather than to official accounts of how they ‘failed’ to measure up to teacher standards. The attention to detail in the multi-site, micro-level practices in teacher education and the ways these unfold in situ for Indigenous students would not be possible without the Indigenist research methodology developed in partnership with Indigenous research colleagues and student co-researchers.

This chapter then serves to remind educational researchers that research is a practice and has practice architectures with particular hegemonic arrangements which have not transpired to serve the interests of Indigenous peoples. Honouring Indigenist standpoint and employing critical race theory in research design thus means paying particular and careful attention to the work that research practices do, on, to, and with communities, not normative (colonial) crafting of the praxis research problem.

Keywords

Citation

Whatman, S. and McLaughlin, J. (2023), "Indigenist Research Practices to Support Indigenous Pre-Service Teaching Praxis", Researching Practices Across and Within Diverse Educational Sites: Onto-epistemological Considerations, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 93-111. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80071-871-520231005

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Susan Whatman and Juliana McLaughlin