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Widening the Angle: Film as Alternative Pedagogy For Wellness In Indigenous Youth

Title:

Widening the Angle: Film as Alternative Pedagogy For Wellness In Indigenous Youth

Linds, Warren ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6379-2338, Sjollema, Sandra, Victor, Janice, Eninew, Lacey and Goulet, Linda (2020) Widening the Angle: Film as Alternative Pedagogy For Wellness In Indigenous Youth. International Journal of Education & the Arts, 21 (1). pp. 1-28. ISSN 1529-8094

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.26209/ijea21n1

Abstract

Indigenous youth face numerous challenges in terms of their well-being. Colonization enforced land and cultural loss, fractured relationships, and restricted the use of the imagination and agentic capacity (Colonial policies, structures, and approaches in education have been detrimental to Indigenous youth (Nardozi, 2013). Many First Nations leaders, community members, and youth have expressed a need for a wider range of activities that move beyond Western models of knowledge and learning (Goulet & Goulet, 2015). School curricula in Indigenous communities are incorporating alternative pedagogical tools, such as the arts, that not only allow youth to explore and express their realities and interests but that also offer them holistic ways of learning and knowing (Yuen et al., 2013). This article describes a participatory arts research project which featured film production and was delivered in the context of a grade 10 Communications Media course. The research took place at a First Nations high school in a Neehithuw (Woodland Cree) community in northern Saskatchewan. This article highlights the content of the films produced, the benefits of the filmmaking experience, and the challenges faced by the teacher and students during the process.

Divisions:Concordia University > Faculty of Arts and Science > Applied Human Sciences
Item Type:Article
Refereed:Yes
Authors:Linds, Warren and Sjollema, Sandra and Victor, Janice and Eninew, Lacey and Goulet, Linda
Journal or Publication:International Journal of Education & the Arts
Date:6 January 2020
Funders:
  • Saskatchewan Health Research Foundation
  • Canadian Institutes of Health Research—Institute of Aboriginal Peoples’ Health
Digital Object Identifier (DOI):10.26209/ijea21n1
ID Code:986353
Deposited By: WARREN LINDS
Deposited On:22 Jan 2020 19:33
Last Modified:22 Jan 2020 19:34
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