Abstract

This article draws from autoethnography and historical analysis to examine how racialized people pursue educational justice, consent, inclusion, and enjoyment through non-hegemonic learning. A historical analysis of U.S. colonial education systems imposed upon Diné and Philippine peoples grounds a comparative study on two forms of anti-colonial pedagogy: Indigenous education and critical unschooling. These two lines of inquiry underpin autoethnographic analyses of our own experiences in non-hegemonic learning to offer direct insights into the process of experiential, and decolonial growth intimated in relational learning environments. Indigenous education and critical unschooling literature both affirm the notion that all learners are always already educators and students, regardless of their age, ability, or status. This notion reorients the processes and aspirations of education toward an understanding that everyone holds valuable knowledge and is inherently sovereign. These relational values link together to form systems of circular knowledge exchange that honour the gifts of all learners and create learning environments where every contribution is framed as vital to the whole of the community. This study shows that because these principles resonate in multiple sites of colonial contact across Philippine and Diné knowledge systems, through Indigenous education and critical unschooling, and in our own lived experiences, it is important to examine these resonant frequencies together as a syncretic whole and to consider how they can inform further subversions of hegemonic educational frameworks.

Highlights

  • This article examines the resonances between Indigenous education and critical unschooling—two forms of non-hegemonic pedagogy that centre experiential learning, inclusivity, and community engagement

  • Recognising their common departure from the orthodoxies of Western educational philosophy, this study investigates the parallels, possibilities, and divergences between Indigenous education and critical unschooling to expand our understanding of anti-colonial pedagogy, or ways of teaching and learning and relating that resist the metastasizing violence of colonialism while honouring the aspirations of those doing the resisting (Zembylas 2020)

  • It is important to note that colonial education failed to eradicate the Indigenous lifeways of Diné and Philippine peoples, a fact that informs Section 3, which discusses the resonances between Diné and Philippine epistemology and lifeways

Read more

Summary

Introduction

This article examines the resonances between Indigenous education and critical unschooling—two forms of non-hegemonic pedagogy that centre experiential learning, inclusivity, and community engagement. Critical unschooling refers to a form of primarily home-based education which defines the pursuit of gender equity, community engagement, and social justice as the objective of education itself (Romero 2018, 2021) Recognising their common departure from the orthodoxies of Western educational philosophy, this study investigates the parallels, possibilities, and divergences between Indigenous education and critical unschooling to expand our understanding of anti-colonial pedagogy, or ways of teaching and learning and relating that resist the metastasizing violence of colonialism while honouring the aspirations of those doing the resisting (Zembylas 2020). It is important to note that colonial education failed to eradicate the Indigenous lifeways of Diné and Philippine peoples, a fact that informs Section 3, which discusses the resonances between Diné and Philippine epistemology and lifeways This act of theorising-as-remembrance grounds this article in the relational and ancestral theories of personhood, learning, and sociality that colonial schooling sought to undermine and replace. Comparative, and autoethnographic analysis together to show how Philippine and Diné values can be remembered through relational and non-hegemonic learning, we seek to illuminate hopeful ways forward in the pursuit of life-affirming pedagogies rooted in kinship, communion, and solidarity

The Roots of Compulsory Schooling and the Need for Decolonial Approaches
Points of Convergence
Critical Unschooling and Indigenous Education
Autoethnography of a Filipino-American Unschooler
A Life of Learning: A Diné Narrative
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call