De/colonising educational relations in geography classrooms

De/colonising educational relations  in geography classrooms
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Addressing the theme of decolonisation in education, this presentation by Fatmakhanu Pirbhai-Illich and Fran Martin explores critical perspectives and practices for transforming geography classrooms towards greater inclusivity and equity.

  • Decolonisation
  • Geography
  • Education
  • Inclusivity
  • Equity

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  1. De/colonising educational relations in geography classrooms Geographical Association Annual Conference April 2021 Fatmakhanu (fatima) Pirbhai-Illich, University of Regina Fran Martin, University of Exeter

  2. I know what colonisation means I know what decolonisation means I understand the difference between colonisation and coloniality

  3. Forsaken

  4. Who am I?

  5. Situating ourselves identity and colonialism Histories Colonialism Geographies Connection to land Identities Citizenship Cultures

  6. Locating Locating identities identities Who are you? What brought you to this space? Breakout Rooms

  7. https://everydayorientalism.wordpress.com/2020/04/29/teaching-orientalism-through-art-practice-othered-the-virtual-exhibit/https://everydayorientalism.wordpress.com/2020/04/29/teaching-orientalism-through-art-practice-othered-the-virtual-exhibit/ Alastair Pennycook (1998): colonialism is not simply the context in which European colonial nations' cultures were imposed upon colonised nations; it is also the context that produced discourses which have lasting effects in large domains of Western thought and culture. Colonialism: European expansion; full or partial political control of other countries; economic exploitation Coloniality: Underlying logic of colonialism; racialized, objective categorization; hierarchical; binary, oppositional constructions of self and Other Colonial discourses persist today through language and how it is used to shape our lives culturally and materiality European nations and colonial discourses

  8. Coloniality of Coloniality of power and its power and its mechanisms mechanisms Relations Erasure Appropriation White supremacy Language Land Superiority Culture Knowledges Domination Mind Bodies Control Body Cultures Possession Self Resources Exploitation Spirit Paternalism Saviourism

  9. Colonial geographies: Colonial geographies: Spaces, places and boundaries Spaces, places and boundaries Power , identity & belonging: social-material-spiritual relations 9

  10. Colonial geographies and Colonial geographies and the white possessive the white possessive The significance of property ownership as a prerequisite to citizenship was tied to the British notion that only people who owned the country, not merely those who lived in it, were eligible to make decisions about it (Ladson-Billings, 2009, p. 25). The British concept of divine right to sovereignty validated the their claim to ownership of the land and to imagine Australia as a white possession (Moreton- Robinson, 2015). Aileen Moreton-Robinson 2015. 10

  11. Colonial geographies: Economic and epistemological appropriation

  12. The coloniality of Geography: The coloniality of Geography: categorization and fragmentation categorization and fragmentation Disciplinary knowledge Human geography Physical geography Environmental geography Cultural geography Social geography Geomorphology Climatology Ecosystems Sustainability

  13. Colonial discourses in geography Colonial discourses in geography Developed-developing-underdeveloped Civilised-uncivilised-exotic Positioning of Africa, India, Bangladesh, Pakistan Positioning of USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand Homogenisation Democratic-undemocratic Superior-inferior Wealthy-poor Donor-recipient

  14. The coloniality of geography education The coloniality of geography education The education system The discipline The The curriculum classroom

  15. Geography and British Fundamental Values How is the nation and national identity imagined in this image? Pirbhai-Illich & Martin (2020). Fundamental British Values: Geography s contribution to understanding difference. Primary Geographer, issue 103, p. 23-25. https://www.geography.org.uk/Journal- Issue/fb40ca15-4c56-4e3b-bbda- c774b8487bfd

  16. Classroom teaching & de/coloniality Classroom teaching & de/coloniality De/colonial educational relations Colonial educational relations Critical relationality Intersubjective, interconnected, interdependent In relation with (not to) Invitation & hospitality Space, place and boundaries Often object-focused Potential violence epistemic and ontological harm Categorisation and separation (subject silos; knowledge hierarchies) Homogenisation

  17. Importance of history: How might you teach someone whose community has had negative relationships with your community in the past? How might you teach someone whose community has been forced by your community to be and know according to your ways rather than theirs? Ways of being / orientations: Being with Inviting plural ways of being, knowing and doing Being attentive to ones own translations Humility Respect Reciprocity Working with invitation and hospitality

  18. Creating spaces of belonging

  19. De/colonizing educational relationships: Teacher identities and positioning Who am I? How do the intersecting dimensions of my identity affect who I am and how I teach? (race, ethnicity, socio-economic status, religion, gender, ability, sexual orientation). To what extent do my choices over what and how I teach unconsciously reflect my own identity? (unconscious bias) To what extent do I consciously invite the ways of being that are different to my identity into the classroom? How can I create learning spaces of belonging rather than those that are alienating? How can I move away from the divisive (colonial) ways of thinking that marginalise and disenfranchise different groups?

  20. Geographys complicity in colonialism and coloniality __________________________________________________ The ongoing coloniality of geographical knowledge production is not only widely accepted, it is also now every geographer's problem. Critical debates around the meaning and shape of decolonial geographical education and knowledge production must be kept alive. Not only must we not stop debating decolonial education, but we must also make sure to translate our debates into educational praxis. (p. 9) To what extent are we, as students, teachers, researchers, lecturers, and professors, relating to and working with each other every day in a way that is underpinned by lessons learned from colonial oppressions and grassroots decolonial struggles? (p. 10) Marcin Stanek (2019). Decolonial Education and Geography: Geography Compass 13(12), p. 1-13.

  21. I know what colonisation means I know what decolonisation means I understand the difference between colonisation and coloniality I have some ideas about what to do next

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