"No culture can live if it attempts to be exclusive." - Gandhi

All Resources

Linking Diversity with the Educational and Civic Missions of Higher Education

Hurtado, S.

https://heri.ucla.edu/PDFs/ASHE%20Presidential%20Address-Hurtado.pdf

Notes:

The Review of Higher Education 30(2), 185–196.

Living Indigenous leadership: Native narratives on building strong communities

Kenny, C. & Fraser, T.

http://www.ubcpress.ca/books/pdf/chapters/2012/LivingIndigenousLeadership.pdf

Notes:

Vancouver: UBC Press.

Looking Back to the Potlatch as a Guide to Truth, Reconciliation, and Transformative Learning

Justin Wilson, Aaron Nelson‐Moody (Tawx'sin Yexwulla)

https://rdcu.be/bDzIn

May 3, 2019

Wiley Online Library

Notes:

This article presents an evolving transformative praxis referred to as “a pot-latch methodology” to establish wholistic truth and reconciliation engage-ment for diverse classroom compositions, drawing on traditional ways ofknowing in the authors’ H ́ı ̃lzaqv (Heiltsuk) and Skwxw ́u7mesh (Squamish)communities.1The Potlach is a high-context (ancient, culturally and spir-itually informed) approach designed to apply intercultural/transformativelearning concepts necessary for witnessing greater intergenerational learn-ing and success. At the micro level, the method can be used to engage yourstudents and to design your lessons plans and rubrics; at the macro level,its utility can also serve to respectfully engage community scholars to helpindigenize your institution (Wilcox et al. 2008). In this article, we modelthe ways in which we create inclusive teaching spaces by incorporating ourIndigenous languages, storytelling, and ways of knowing and learning intoour courses and teaching approaches. For example, as you read the arti-cle, you may notice the ways in which we articulate our positionality andsources of knowledge to create an inclusive learning space, or the ways inwhich we infuse traditional academic writing with storytelling, argumen-tation, and unique concepts from our cultures, represented in our originallanguages and spelling in order to decolonize academic discourse.

Mapping the Broad Field of Multicultural and Intercultural Education Worldwide: Towards the Development of a New Citizen

Palaiologou, N. & Dietz, G.

http://www.cambridgescholars.com/multicultural-and-intercultural-education-series-4

Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Notes:

URL link leads to publisher site.
In N. Palaiologou & G. Dietz (Eds.). (pp. xvi-xxiv).

Modelling assessment of the outcomes and impacts of internationalisation

Hudzik, J. K., & Stohl, M.

http://secretariageneral.univalle.edu.co/consejo-academico/temasdediscusion/2014/Documentos_de_interes_general/Lecturas_Internacionalizacion/Measuring%20internasionalisation%20EAIE.pdf

Notes:

In H. de Wit (Ed.), Measuring success in international education (EAIE Occasional Paper 22 ed.) (pp. 9-22) European Association for International Education.

Moral education in an age of globalization

Noddings, N.

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1469-5812.2008.00487.x

Notes:

Educational Philosophy and Theory, 42(4), 390-396. doi:10.1111/j.1469-5812.2008.00487.x

More than a checklist: Meaningful Indigenous inclusion in higher education

Moving beyond ‘diversity’ to ‘social justice’: The challenge to re-conceptualize multicultural education

Schoorman, D., & Bogotch, I.

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14675980903491916

Notes:

Intercultural Education, 21(1), 79-85. doi:10.1080/14675980903491916

Moving beyond wishing and hoping: internationalisation and student experiences of inclusion and engagement

Leask, B. & Carroll, J

https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ953060

Notes:

Higher Education Research and Development, Special issue: Internationalizing the Home Student, 30(5), 647-659.

National Centre on Universal Design for Learning

Native North American Books

Norquest Centre for Intercultural Education Resources

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