Indigenous Secondary Education

Indigenous Secondary Education

What implications for counsellors lie in the stories of Indigenous adults, who as children, left their home communities to attend school?

Scholar's Press ( 2013-03-08 )

€ 104,90

Buy at the MoreBooks! Shop

Access to a ‘good’ education is often argued as deserving of the highest priority. The available research pertaining to the educational experience of Australian Indigenous students, however, too often reflects a picture of profound disadvantage, particularly in relation to their non-Indigenous counterparts. In 2008, Prime Minister Rudd announced $20 million of Federal Government funding for 2000 boarding school places over 20 years, to address chronic levels of academic underachievement and ‘close the education gap’ between black and white Australians. Education in Australia, however, is tied to white culture, the industrial economy and the means through which white culture survives, so accepting these places may also have a shadow side, in relation to multiple levels of loss and possible cultural alienation. The purpose of this research study is to discover what implications for counselling practice lie in the self-report of the ‘lived experience’ of an adult sample of eight Indigenous participants who, as children, experienced leaving home to attend school. Their experience spans five decades.

Book Details:

ISBN-13:

978-3-639-51161-1

ISBN-10:

3639511611

EAN:

9783639511611

Book language:

English

By (author) :

Suzanne Jenkins

Number of pages:

372

Published on:

2013-03-08

Category:

General Social sciences