Abstract
Indigenous African education grew out of the immediate environment, real or imaginary, where people had knowledge of the environment. Indigenous education inculcated a religious attitude that imbued courtesy, generosity, and honesty. At colonization, Africans were thought of as primitive although they had their own systems, contents, and methods of education. Colonialism signified the decline in the importance of indigenous knowledge systems (IKS). By shifting focus in the core curriculum from teaching/learning based on Western science to teaching/learning through IKS as a foundation for all education, it is anticipated that all forms of knowledge, ways of knowing, and world views be acknowledged as equally valid, adaptable, and complementary to one another in equally valuable ways. The uniqueness of indigenous people and their knowledge is inextricably connected to their lands, which are situated primarily at the social-ecological margins of human habitation such as tropical forests and desert margins. It is at these margins that the consequences of climate change manifest themselves in the following sectors: agriculture, pastoralism, fishing, hunting and gathering, and other subsistence activities, including access to water. Government policies in Zimbabwe often limit options and thus undermine indigenous peoples’ efforts to adapt. IKS is very important for community-based adaptation and mitigation actions in the agricultural sector for maintenance of resilience of social-ecological systems at a local level. This article, through interviews, document analysis, and personal observations, proposes that it is best for Zimbabwe to develop her own climate change curricula and modes of delivery that incorporates IKS.
Highlights
Climate variability and changes have serious consequences for peoples’ livelihoods; any serious nation should give young people the chance to understand climate issues at a tender age (Makwara, 2013)
The changing dynamics in education brought about by advances in information technology has shifted education focus from the traditional “teacher-centred teaching” to “learner-centred teaching”. The emphasis of this process is for the students to learn through critical engagement of varied methods that shifts the role of teachers from providers of information to facilitators of student learning and knowledge transfer (Kurasha, 2015; Mararike, 1999)
The least experienced had taught for 5 years while the most experienced had taught for 13 years; they were a source of a diversity of views in as far as indigenous knowledge systems (IKS) was concerned
Summary
Climate variability and changes have serious consequences for peoples’ livelihoods; any serious nation should give young people the chance to understand climate issues at a tender age (Makwara, 2013). The changing dynamics in education brought about by advances in information technology has shifted education focus from the traditional “teacher-centred teaching” (where previously, teachers focused on what they taught and how they taught it) to “learner-centred teaching” (where focus is on what students are learning and how they acquire such knowledge through various relevant media). The emphasis of this process is for the students to learn through critical engagement of varied methods that shifts the role of teachers from providers of information to facilitators of student learning and knowledge transfer (Kurasha, 2015; Mararike, 1999).
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