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Honouring Cultural Differences in Early Childhood Education and Care: Participatory Research with a Colombian Embera Chamí Indigenous Community

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Honouring Cultural Differences in Early Childhood Education and Care: Participatory Research with a Colombian Embera Chamí Indigenous Community

Hoyos Vivas, Luz Marina (2020) Honouring Cultural Differences in Early Childhood Education and Care: Participatory Research with a Colombian Embera Chamí Indigenous Community. PhD thesis, 225408.

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Abstract

Cultural diversity is largely accepted as something that enriches societies, and it is often identified as a government priority in national programs. Nevertheless, there is institutional resistance to transforming education practices in order to ensure their cultural responsiveness. This study explores participatory research with parents and other community members in the development of an Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) programming framework as a way to create room for a meaningful inclusion of local knowledge, language, and traditions in education practice. We used a de-colonial conversational research methodology based on Mingas de Pensamiento, which is a way to collectively construct and transmit knowledge in some Colombian and Latin American Indigenous communities. Through this participatory and de-colonial process, we planned with the Wasiruma, a Colombian Indigenous community, a pedagogical program based on local traditions, such as respect for Mother Earth, spiritual life, Jaibanismo (local customs based on a form of Shamanism), and the Embera Chamí Language.
In this manner, we found that a participatory de-colonial research approach is an effective way to propose an ECEC program that is culturally responsive, inspired by the local conception of childhood, and preserves the local language and social organization, as well as local ways of knowing. The recognition of ways of knowing and dialogue among different kinds of knowledges created room for the co-construction of a new ECEC program. In this sense, the research makes a theoretical contribution, in terms of the necessity to embrace local knowledge through conversation. This process involves a decolonizing perspective that allows the dialogue among different knowledges to exist. In this way, the research overcomes perspectives based on the simple addition of some local features to a predesigned program.

Divisions:Concordia University > School of Graduate Studies > Individualized Program
Item Type:Thesis (PhD)
Refereed:Yes
Authors:Hoyos Vivas, Luz Marina
Institution:225408
Degree Name:Ph. D.
Program:Individualized Program
Date:16 March 2020
Thesis Supervisor(s):cleghorn, ailie
ID Code:986649
Deposited By: LUZ MARINA HOYOS
Deposited On:25 Jun 2020 17:44
Last Modified:25 Jun 2020 17:44
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