Index
ISBN: 978-1-80043-007-5, eISBN: 978-1-80043-006-8
Publication date: 3 September 2021
This content is currently only available as a PDF
Citation
(2021), "Index", Kumar, M. and Welikala, T. (Ed.) Teaching and Learning in Higher Education: The Context of Being, Interculturality and New Knowledge Systems, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 299-310. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80043-006-820211025
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2021 Emerald Publishing Limited
INDEX
Note: Page numbers followed by “n” indicate notes.
Aboriginal Being
, 54–55
Aboriginal Knowledge Systems
, 27
Aboriginal methodological framework
, 210
Aboriginal Peoples
, 55, 60–61
Aboriginal Protection Act
, 56, 59
Aboriginal spirituality
, 48
Aboriginal students in visual arts
, 210
collaboration
, 219
contemporary historical influence
, 220–221
curriculum inclusivity
, 217–218
findings
, 215–217
interculturality
, 219–220
literature review
, 210–213
methodological framework
, 214–215
protocols of understanding
, 218
standpoint
, 213–214
study
, 214
welcome or acknowledgement to country
, 218–219
Academic literacy
, 135
perspectives of self in higher education
, 137–138
Academic socialization approach
, 137–138
Academic teaching and research
, 140–141
Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT), 264n2
Action
, 100
Action-theoretical approaches
, 101
A-cultural becoming process
, 285
Addiction management
, 54
Affective attributes
, 264
African diaspora
, 225–226
Agency
, 100, 103
Agentive role in higher education
, 262–263
Aggiornamento
, 98
Ahimsa
, 241
Analects
, 112–113
Anathema
, 178
Andragogy
, 231
Anglosphere
, 100, 103, 105
Anthropocene
, 97
Anthropology
, 69, 74, 205
Association
, 102, 174
Australia
Chinese Gen Z Studying in
, 110
Chinese international students
, 115–119
Confucian legacy in current Chinese education system
, 113–114
human habitus and interculturality
, 109–111
idea of self-cultivation
, 111–113
Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS)
, 34
Authorial self-reflexivity
, 262
Authoring process
, 142
Authority
, 58, 85, 113–114, 117–118
Autoethnographic analysis
, 138
Autoethnographical methodological framework
, 262
Autoethnography
, 68, 136, 263
Autonomy
, 187
Awareness, Authenticity and Autonomy principle (AAA principle)
, 142
Axiological needs
, 103
Bantu Philosophy
, 99
Becoming
, 67, 70–72, 97, 271, 175
Behaviour
, 102
Being
, 2–3, 12–13, 47, 67–68, 97, 103, 251, 271
agentive role
, 35–36
to be learning
, 28–29
in cultures
, 26
educationally mobile teacher
, 69–70
human
, 7
in indigenous knowledge systems
, 26
in intercultural spaces
, 134
and interculturality
, 13–16
interculturality new knowledge systems and
, 16–18
introduction and contextualisation
, 26
learned knowledge
, 30–35
learning progressing
, 29–30
in pain
, 147
positioning and methodological standpoint
, 26–27
study
, 27–28
and wholistic education
, 61
world in our classrooms
, 68–69
Belonging
, 67, 72
belongingness as lived experience
, 161–163
global health citizenships
, 73–74
in higher education
, 159
interculturality
, 160–161
interculturality as explanatory lens
, 163–165
modes
, 200–201
mutual learning and medical pluralism
, 74–75
student narratives of belongingness
, 166–169
teaching spaces
, 72–73
UNSDG
, 159–160
Belongingness
, 161
in higher education context
, 161–162
inclusive curricula, educator competences and student agency
, 162–163
as lived experience
, 161
student narratives of
, 166–169
Bildung
, 70
Black Africans, 226n2
Black Lives Matter movement
, 251–252
Borderlands Cooperative
, 96
Borders
, 68
Boston Consulting Group
, 271
Boundaries
, 68
Britzman’s concept of difficult knowledge
, 82
Buddha
, 178
Burgher, 128n5
Caltura Catcherry
, 127
Cartesian duality
, 5
Catholic Workers Movement
, 98
Chinese Gen Z Studying in Australia
Chinese international students
, 115–119
confucian Legacy in current Chinese education system
, 113–114
human habitus and interculturality
, 109–111
idea of self-cultivation
, 111–113
Chinese international students
, 115–119
Chinese learner
, 115
Chineseness
, 115
Chorus baila
, 128
Chronotope
, 136
Citizen
, 86
Civil society, Portuguese impact on
, 126–127
Civilisatory impact of colonisation
, 99
Cogito
, 176
Collective endeavour
, 230–231
Colonial encounters
, 1, 14
Colonial rule
, 126
Colonial Western education
, 228
Colonialism
, 1
Coloniality
, 176
of Being
, 173
Colonisation
, 55, 59
Coloniser
, 284
Coming to know process
, 179
Commercialisation of higher education
, 173
Communicating/communication
, 69, 149
Communion
, 102
Community Based Delivery Model
, 212
Community/communities
, 200–201
community-based literary texts
, 80
in Congo
, 98
development
, 54, 99–100
learning
, 60
of practice
, 198
Complexity thinking
, 135
Comprehensive internationalisation
, 276
Conflict
, 124
Conflicted affinities
, 276–277
Confronting values
, 74
Confucian classics place
, 112
Confucian teaching
, 112, 114
Confucian tradition believes
, 117–118
Confucian-heritage cultures
, 115–116
Confucianism
, 114, 116
Connection
, 54, 55–56
connecting disconnected
, 59
Consciousness raising
, 100
Constructive alignment
, 72
Constructivist framework
, 277
Contemporary theories
, 153
Contested teaching practices
, 83–84
Contextualised assessments
, 160
Council of Europe (CoE)
, 161
COVAX, 264n2
Co-vid (see COVID-19)
COVID-19
, 2, 262
backstory to COVID-19 pandemic
, 263–265
flipping of normality
, 270–271
impact in higher education
, 262
pandemic
, 66
theoretical and methodological framework
, 262
Creative nonfiction
, 186
Critical approach
, 138, 174
Critical literacy
, 137
Critical ontological framework
, 80
Critical ontology
, 89
Critical pedagogy
, 88
Critical social analysis
, 70
Critical thinking
, 187
Cross–cultural
communication
, 173
dialogue
, 173
learning
, 4
translation
, 102
Crossing of borders
, 265–269
Cultural/culture
, 5, 97, 105, 110, 135, 173, 187, 202–204, 276
awareness
, 213–214
of borderlessness
, 283
and community
, 30, 32–33
competency
, 173
difference
, 3, 6, 174
dimensions
, 111
diversity
, 109
and interculturality
, 173–175
relativist
, 99
scripts
, 277
tradition
, 110
traits on domestic life
, 127
values
, 70
Culturality
, 1
of other
, 5–6
Curriculum
design in plurilingual context
, 141–142
formal
, 166–167
hidden
, 168–169
inclusivity
, 217–218
informal
, 167–168
Daisaku Ikeda
, 239
Deborah Padfield (DP)
, 15, 150–152
DeCentred experience
, 186
breaking through to new old world
, 189–191
competing narratives of research
, 187–188
competing worlds
, 191–193
small culture formation on go
, 193–194
travelling to ‘A Western University’
, 186–187
Decision-making process
, 9
Decolonial love
, 173
Decoloniality
, 255
Decolonisation
, 1, 59, 67
Democracy
, 86
Department of Education and Training (DET)
, 213
Desirous pedagogy
, 88–89
Developing countries
, 99
Development
, 100
Dhamma
, 178
Dharma
, 239
Dialogic agentive positioning
, 30
Dialogic approach
, 141
Dialogical Self Theory (DST)
, 136
Dialogism
, 137
Dialogue
theory
, 135
trans-positioning through
, 142–143
Difference, disparity, disadvantage, dysfunction and deprivation (5D Data)
, 60
Differential meanings
, 105
Directness
, 203
Disciplines
, 68, 113–114
Disconnection
, 54
connecting disconnected
, 59
Diverging pedagogical culture
, 286
Diversity
, 173
cultural
, 109–110
in Sri Lankan society
, 128
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
, 42
Dreaming
, 60
Dream–time
, 60
EBSCOhost
, 226
Education
, 70, 134
pedagogy
, 82
Education for Sustainable Development (ESD)
, 70, 243
Educator(s)
, 67
competences
, 162–163
Emotions
, 74
Engagement modes
, 204–205
English
, 80, 97, 201
English Medium Instruction
, 198
Epistemic injustice
, 255
Epistemic reciprocity
, 249, 255
Epistemic shift
culture and interculturality
, 173–175
idea of interculturality
, 173
non–self concept
, 178–179
philosophy of other
, 178
polarised self and other
, 175–178
self–other distinction embedded in interculturality
, 172
Epistemicide
, 255
Epistemological racism
, 255–256
Epistemology
, 253
Equality
, 173
Equity as standards for behaviour
, 165
Ergonagy
, 231
Estado da India
, 127
Ethical essentialisms
, 48
Ethics
, 44
Excluding
, 97
Exclusivity
, 1
Existential needs
, 103
Experience
, 96
Experiential knowledge
, 49
Explanatory models
, 153
Falsehood
, 100
Feeling of trepidation
, 267
Feelings matter
, 263, 266
Feitorias (trading posts)
, 125
Feminist
, 46
knowledge of systematic racism
, 43
Fictionalisation
, 199
Filiality
, 112, 113–114
Financial sustainability
, 270
Fine Art teaching
, 155
Flipping of normality
, 270–271
Formal curriculum
, 166–167
Fortalezas (fortresses)
, 125
Foucauldian perspectives
, 46
Fragmentation
, 101
Frankfurt School
, 101
Functional interculturality
, 281–282
Functionalist approach
, 174
Fuzzy context
, 276
Gademerian fusion of horizons
, 174
Gandhi, Mohandas Karamchand
, 238
challenging epistemic assumptions and suggestions for practice
, 245–246
and moral leader
, 238–240
pedagogical approach to learning for global citizenship based on study of Gandhi
, 243–245
political creativity and bold collective action
, 240–243
Ganma theory
, 50
Gao kao
, 113–114, 119
Garawa People
, 55
Garma refers
, 48
Gauthama Buddha
, 178
GCE (see Global Citizenship Education (GCED))
Generic meanings
, 105
Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation (Gavi), 264n2
Global citizenship
, 173
Global Citizenship Education (GCED)
, 238
Global health citizenships
, 73–74
Global learning skills
, 279
Global literacies in plurilingual context
, 141–142
Globalisation
, 4, 180, 276
Google Scholar
, 226
Graduate School of Education
, 253
Habitus
, 262, 263–264, 268
Happiness
, 243–244
Health
, 66
Heutagogy
, 231
Hidden curriculum
, 168–169
Hierarchical meanings
, 105
Higher degree research (HDR)
, 44
Higher education (HE), 198 (see also University education)
academic literacy perspectives and (trans)positioning of ‘self’ in
, 137–138
belongingness in higher education context
, 161–162
commercialisation of
, 173
images and participatory methods within
, 154–155
interculturality in
, 3
internationalisation of
, 173
practitioner
, 249
skill culture in
, 173
teachers
, 278
Higher education institutions (HEIs)
, 109, 160
Historical narratives
, 129
Historicality of other
, 231
Historio–political concept
, 30–31
Homogenisation
, 45–46
Host national cultures
, 278
Human becoming
, 178
Human habitus concept
, 109–111
Human Scale approach
, 103
Humanism
, 239
Humility
, 71
Hybridity
, 192
Ideal–typical modes of relating
, 102
Identification
, 1
Identity politics
, 105
Ideological becoming
, 135
Ideologies
, 135, 239
Images within higher education
, 154–155
Inclusion
, 4–5, 173
Inclusive curricula
, 162–163
Inclusive internationalisation
, 276
Inclusive learning environments
, 160
Inclusivity
, 1, 249
Incommensurability
, 48–49
Indian Institute of Technology (IIT)
, 269
Indigenous epistemology
, 49
Indigenous knowledge
, 9, 45, 82
Indigenous Knowledge Systems
, 2–3, 29, 210, 214
agentive role
, 35–36
to be learning
, 28–29
being in
, 26
introduction and contextualisation
, 26
learned knowledge
, 30–35
learning progressing
, 29–30
positioning and methodological standpoint
, 26–27
study
, 27–28
Indigenous Languages and Arts programs (ILA programs)
, 212
Indigenous literary texts
, 80
Indigenous peoples
, 8–9, 46
Indigenous philosophies
, 228–229
Indigenous research
, 42
appropriation
, 47–48
homogenisation
, 45–46
incommensurability and metaphorisation
, 48–49
knowledge
, 49–50
positioning
, 42–44
story telling
, 46–47
Indigenous sovereignty
, 44
Indigenous standpoint theory
, 43
Indigenous Visual Arts Industry Support (IVAIS)
, 212
Indirect social work
, 104
Individual professional academics
, 199
Individualism
, 187
Individualist criticality
, 187–188
Informal curriculum
, 167–168
Information technology
, 276
Innovative visual methods
, 153
Insiders
, 200
Institutional cultures
, 278
Institutional strategic frameworks
, 173
Institutionalised values
, 66
Integrated English curriculum in Kenya
, 81
Intellectual–professional environment
, 103–104
Intercultural
, 4
being
, 136–137, 139–140
challenging epistemic assumptions and suggestions for practice
, 245–246
competency
, 173
education
, 174–175, 238
and moral leader
, 238–240
paradigm
, 277, 279
pedagogical approach to learning for global citizenship based on study of Gandhi
, 243–245
perspectives on education for citizenship
, 238
political creativity and bold collective action
, 240–243
scaffolding
, 101
teamwork
, 168–169
translation
, 102
understanding
, 136
Interculturality
, 3–5, 6–7, 96, 106, 109–111, 160–161, 163–164, 219–220, 251
being, new knowledge systems and
, 16–18
being and
, 13–16
culture and
, 173–175
equity and respect as standards for behaviour
, 165
as explanatory lens
, 163
of other
, 5–6
outcomesm
, 164
as process
, 165
self–other distinction embedded in
, 172
in Sri Lankan society
, 128
Interculturality, conceptualising
, 15, 174
International Association of Building Companions (IBO)
, 98
International Federation of Social Workers (IFSW)
, 228
International Institute for Higher Education in Latin America and Caribbean (IESALC)
, 270
International Labour Organisation (ILO)
, 9
International students, revenue and
, 268–269
Internationalisation
, 1, 4–5, 276
analytical process
, 198–199
belonging modes
, 200–201
cooperative cultures
, 205–206
culture
, 202–204
of curriculum
, 160
engagement modes
, 204–205
in higher education
, 70, 173, 276
language
, 201–202
process
, 199–200
questions for participants
, 208
Interpolation
, 42, 46–47
Interprofessional interactions
, 67
Intersensoriality
, 179
Intra–cultural understandings
, 102
Kaffrinha
, 128
Kenya Institute of Curriculum Development (KICD) (see Kenya Institute of Education (KIE))
Kenya Institute of Education (KIE)
, 82–83
Kenyan higher education
, 80
Knowledge
, 135, 249
systems
, 129, 270
Language
, 28, 96, 135, 201–202
Portuguese impact on
, 127–128
Languaging
, 96
Learning
, 1, 111, 230–231, 265–268
to be
, 238
to do
, 238
and everyday life
, 229–230
for global citizenship
, 243–245
to know
, 238
progressing
, 29–30
space
, 54
Liminality
, 282
Lingua franca
, 96–97
Linguistic border
, 98
Linguistic pluralism
, 98
Listening
, 69
Lived experience
, 161
belongingness as
, 161–163
Macrolevel framework
, 263–265
Management Systems
, 268
Manikay, 48
Manufactured difference
, 6
effective engagement with alterity
, 7–8
interculturality
, 6–7
Margins
, 191–192
Marrung Plan
, 213
Marxism
, 102
Mary Wickenden (MW)
, 150
Master’s degree in Public Health (MPH)
, 69
Matrix
, 103
Medical pluralism
, 74–75
Mesolevel framework
, 265–269
Metaphor
, 50
Metaphorisation
, 48–49
Methodological approach
, 54–55
Microlevel framework
, 270–271
Midiru People
, 55
Ministry of Education Science and Technology (MEST)
, 82
More Knowledgeable Other (MKO)
, 142
Multicultural higher education
, 134
Multicultural learning spaces
, 67
Multicultural paradigm
, 277, 279
Multicultural pedagogic paradigm
, 280
Multiculturalism
, 4
Multilingual higher education
, 134
Multilingual learning spaces
, 67
Multilingualism
, 96–98
Mutual learning
, 74–75
Nādagama
, 128
Naming
, 30, 31–32
Narrative approach
, 277
within participatory orientation
, 278
National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC)
, 160
National Ethics Application Form (NEAF)
, 35
National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)
, 35
Neo–liberal agenda
, 279, 283
Neo–liberal rationality
, 276
New knowledge systems
, 8–12, 251
being, interculturality and
, 16–18
New millennium (Gen Z)
, 110
Non–self concept
, 178–179
Non–indigenous researchers
, 42
Non–violence (see Ahimsa)
Non–Western modes
, 46
Normality, flipping of
, 270–271
One size fits all approach
, 166–167
Ontology
, 253
Oral tradition
, 30, 33, 42
Other
, 172, 175
polarised
, 175–178
Otherness
, 136
Outsideness
, 136
Outsiders
, 200
Pain
, 146–147
alternative routes to knowledge creation
, 153–154
being in
, 147
images and participatory methods within higher education
, 154–155
participatory methods and reflexive turn
, 147–148
visualising pain project in Delhi, India
, 148–153
Participatory creative workshop
, 150
Participatory methods
, 147–148, 153
within higher education
, 154–155
Pedagogical approach to learning
, 243–245
Pedagogical paradigms
changing pedagogical relationships
, 284–285
intercultural pedagogic paradigm
, 281–282
multicultural pedagogic paradigm
, 280
post–cultural paradigm
, 282–284
in relation to culture
, 279–280
Pedagogical positioning
academic literacy perspectives and (trans)positioning of ‘self’
, 137–138
academic teaching and research
, 140–141
autoethnographic analysis and discussion
, 138
education
, 134
global literacies and curriculum design in plurilingual context
, 141–142
PhD journey as springboard
, 138–140
theoretical and methodological frameworks
, 135–137
trans–positioning through dialogue
, 142–143
Pedagogical volatility
, 285
Pedagogy
, 160, 231, 270–271
desirous
, 88–89
education
, 82
Perpendicular pronoun, 96n1
Personal transformations
, 70–72
Personcentred’types of conversations
, 148
PhD journey as springboard
, 138–140
Phenomenology
, 102
Photo elicitation techniques
, 147
Photograph
, 154
Plurilingual higher education, 134 (see also Higher education (HE))
global literacies and curriculum design in plurilingual context
, 141–142
Polarised self and other
, 175–178
Political determinants of health
, 66
Politics
, 230–231
Portuguese
impact on civil society
, 126–127
impact on language and literature
, 127–128
impact on religion
, 126
recognising Portuguese legacy
, 128–129
impact of trade on Sri Lankan economy and culture
, 125–126
Positioning
, 42–44, 139
Positivism
, 97, 102
Postcolonial Kenyan education
, 80
Postcolonialism
, 1, 59
Post–cultural paradigm
, 277, 279, 282–284
Post–cultural pedagogical paradigm
changing pedagogical relationships
, 284–285
conflicted affinities
, 276–277
intercultural pedagogic paradigm
, 281–282
multicultural pedagogic paradigm
, 280
pedagogical paradigms comparison
, 286
pedagogical paradigms in relation to culture
, 279–280
post–cultural paradigm
, 282–284
studies and key findings
, 277
Western cognitive hegemony
, 275–276
Post–cultural spaces
, 285
Practical systematicity
, 268
Praxis
, 96
Primo Search
, 226
Professions
, 68
Programmed disconnection
, 54, 56–59
Protocols
, 30, 34
of understanding
, 218
Proximity
, 165
Public education
, 86
Quality of Education
, 70, 159–160
Quampie methodology
, 61
Rationally developed institutions
, 239
Reciprocal exchanges of national cultures
, 276
Recognition
, 186, 190
Reflection
, 148
Reflective analysis
, 34
Reflective interculturality
, 281–282
Reflexive turn
, 147–148, 155
Reflexivity
, 61, 148
Relatedness theory
, 214
Relational knowledge
, 49
Relational objectivity
, 48
Relationality
, 30, 34, 46–48, 100, 135
Relationally saturated culture
, 98–99
Religion, Portuguese impact on
, 126
Respect
, 71
as standards for behaviour
, 165
Responsible internationalisation
, 276
Revenue and international students
, 268–269
Salt March (see Satyagraha)
Sanga
, 178
SARiHE project
, 252
Satyagraha
, 240–241, 244
Scaffolding
, 96
School of Education
, 253
Self
, 172, 175
polarised
, 175–178
self–direction
, 187
self–awareness
, 115
self–cultivation
, 111–113
self–identification
, 115
self–knowledge
, 230–231
self–other bifurcation
, 172
self–other dichotomy
, 177
self–reflexivity
, 54, 59
Selfhood
, 135
pedagogical process
, 88
Semantic network of meanings
, 153
Semi–structured interviews
, 199
Shared knowledge
, 30, 34
Shifting identities
, 282
Situational circumstance
, 267
Situational trepidation
, 267
Skill culture in higher education
, 173
Skill–based technological and academic learning
, 268
Skills–based approach
, 137
Social determinants of health
, 66
Social essentialism
, 174
Social groups
, 174
Social justice
, 4–5, 238
Social philosophy
, 102
Social support
, 167–168
Social theory
, 102
Social work
education for African background students
, 232
teaching
, 228
Ubuntu relevance to
, 224–225
Sociocultural plurality in Sri Lanka
historical backdrop
, 124–125
impact on civil society
, 126–127
Portuguese impact of trade on Sri Lankan economy and culture
, 125–126
Portuguese impact on language and literature
, 127–128
Portuguese impact on religion
, 126
recognising Portuguese legacy
, 128–129
Socio–economic dynamics
, 285
Sociology
, 102
of absence
, 3
Soka
, 243
Solipsism
, 176
Stark realisation
, 266
Story telling
, 42, 46–47, 70
Storytaking
, 70
‘Strands of knowledge’ framework
, 262
Structural–functionalist approach
, 102
Students
, 55
agency
, 162–163
experience
, 173
formal curriculum
, 166–167
hidden curriculum
, 168–169
informal curriculum
, 167–168
narratives of belongingness
, 166
Superdiversity
, 69
Suspicion
, 174
Sustainability
, 4–5
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
, 243
SDG 4
, 73, 243
Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education (STINT), 65fn
Tacit Explicit
, 55
Teacher Education
, 55
Teacherly self, perception and construction of
, 85–86
Teachers
, 114
Teaching
, 1, 70, 265–268
contested teaching practices
, 83–84
desirous pedagogy
, 88–89
dilemmas in
, 87
indigenous texts in Kenya
, 81–83
literary texts in Kenya
, 80
perception and construction of teacherly self
, 85–86
of selfhood
, 84
social work
, 228
spaces
, 68, 72–73
theory and practice in
, 84–85
Teaching spaces
adopting transgressive approach
, 67–68
becoming
, 70–72
being
, 68–70
belonging
, 72–75
university teachers in global health and intercultural education
, 66–67
Technical and Further Education (TAFE)
, 213
Terra nullius
, 48
Tertiary education
, 100
Theatre of oppressed techniques
, 153
Thematic analysis
, 278
Third space pedagogy
, 138
Togetherness
, 263
Tombos
, 127
Torres Strait Islander Peoples
, 60–61
Torres Strait Islander students in visual arts
, 210
collaboration
, 219
contemporary historical influence
, 220–221
curriculum inclusivity
, 217–218
findings
, 215–217
interculturality
, 219–220
literature review
, 210–213
methodological framework
, 214–215
protocols of understanding
, 218
standpoint
, 213–214
study
, 214
welcome or acknowledgement to country
, 218–219
Training Tool
, 54, 55
Trans–cultural learnings
, 102
Transdisciplinary theory
, 96
Transgressing boundaries
, 70
Transgressive approach, adopting
, 67–68
Translanguaging, rich space for
, 140–141
Transnationalism
, 4
Trans–positioning
, 136
through dialogue
, 142–143
of self in higher education
, 137–138
Tsunesaburo Makiguchi
, 243
Tuppahi
, 127
Two–layered approach
, 263
Ubuntu
, 224, 254
African diaspora
, 225–226
indigenous philosophies
, 228–229
learning, politics, collective endeavour and self-knowledge
, 230–231
learning and everyday life
, 229–230
methodology
, 226–227
relevance to social work
, 224–225
social work
, 232–233
social work education for African background students
, 232
teaching social work
, 228
and Ubuntugogy
, 227–228, 231
Ubuntugogy
, 224, 231
Ubuntu and
, 227–228
UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
, 70
Unhomeliness
, 253
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
, 6, 238
United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 4 (UNSDG)
, 159–160
University education, 265 (see also Wholistic education)
revenue and international students
, 268–269
teaching and learning
, 265–268
Vada baila
, 128
Value–creating global citizenship education
, 243
Verbal method
, 153
Victorian Aboriginal Education Association Incorporated (VAEAI)
, 213
Victorian Curriculum Assessment Authority (VCAA)
, 213
Violence
, 124
Virtual mobility
, 276
Visual arts
, 210
Visual images for communicating pain
, 149
Visualising Pain Project in Delhi, India
, 148–153
Vocational Education Training sector (VET)
, 54
Ways of Being
, 214, 216, 250
Ways of Doing
, 215, 217
Ways of Knowing
, 214, 215–216
Welltanschauung
, 129
Western metaphors
, 50
White complicity
, 255
Whiteness
, 254–256
Wholistic education
, 54, 59–61
being and
, 61
World Economic Forum
, 271
World Health Organisation (WHO)
, 264
Writing process
, 250–251
Yarning circle
, 34
Youth unemployment
, 271
Zone of Proximal Development
, 268
Zones of absence
, 3
Zoom (software program)
, 266
- Prelims
- Introduction: Unravelling
- Part I: Being
- Chapter 1: Theorising the Concept of Being in Indigenous Knowledge Systems: The Changing Face of Research Relationships
- Chapter 2: Being, Relationality and Ethical Know-How in Indigenous Research
- Chapter 3: Connection and Disconnection: My Personal Story to Being
- Chapter 4: Conceptualising Teaching Spaces: The Intersection of Being, Belonging, and Becoming
- Chapter 5: Constructing Difficult Knowledge and Self: Teaching Literary Texts in Kenya
- Part II: Being and Interculturality
- Chapter 6: Modes of Being Across and Between Cultures: Opportunities for Understanding the Pluriverse
- Chapter 7: Self-cultivation and Self-awareness: Chinese Gen Z Studying in Australia
- Chapter 8: Sociocultural Plurality in Sri Lanka: Interculturality and New Knowledge Systems
- Chapter 9: Diverse Pedagogical Positioning in Plurilingual Higher Education: Affordances of Intercultural Being
- Chapter 10: Being in Pain: Using Images and Participatory Methods to Explore Intercultural Understanding of Pain
- Chapter 11: Be-longing in Higher Education: Interculturality as Process and Outcome
- Chapter 12: Self, Other and Interculturality: An Epistemic Shift Towards Intersensoriality
- Part III: Being, Interculturality and New Knowledge Systems
- Chapter 13: Recovering Unrecognised DeCentred Experience
- Chapter 14: Inside Out? Individual Agency and Professional Identity in the Era of Internationalisation in Higher Education
- Chapter 15: Positive Outcomes in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Higher Education and the Visual Arts
- Chapter 16: Adopting Ubuntu in Teaching Social Work
- Chapter 17: Gandhi, Value Creation, and Global Education: Intercultural Perspectives on Education for Citizenship
- Chapter 18: Reclaiming the Future?
- Chapter 19: COVID-19, The Crossing of Borders, New Knowledge Systems and Their Relationship to Higher Education Systems
- Chapter 20: Many Cultures or None? Sighting and Assessing a Post-cultural Pedagogical Paradigm
- Concluding Remarks
- Index