Aboriginal Children Want to Learn ‘Good School Work’

Authors

  • Dasia Black Gutman

Abstract

The study sets out to find out urban Aboriginal children's views of schools and teachers, particularly the things they enjoy and find valuable in their schooling experience and their ideas on what changes they would like to see. Literature indicates that whilst, on the one hand, Aboriginal parents and communities increasingly “want to help my children do better at school” (de Lacy, 1985, p..282), on the other hand very few succeed, especially once they have entered high school. A study by Goodnow and Burns (1985) has shown that primary school children are very discriminating judges of what helps them learn. Thus finding out what Aboriginal children actually say about their school experience may help educators to interpret their behaviour in the school setting more accurately and consequently to communicate with them more effectively. In the fairly extensive literature on Aboriginal children's education a number of relevant themes recur. One is the importance of personal relationships in Aboriginal children's learning. Affiliation is the basis of traditional Aboriginal relationships with individuality of the person secondary to the close knit family group. This is expressed as concern with affectionate relations in Aboriginal children's interactions with teachers and peers. It relates to what Honeyman (1986) calls traditional Aboriginal society's “humane teaching”, where education was through guidance rather than direct instruction. Another theme is the unpredictability of educational outcomes for Aboriginal students, particularly the nature of the acquisition of English literacy. “It is the most puzzling yet most debilitating characteristic of Aboriginal education to be recognised in recent times.” (Willmot, 1989, p.10) There are contradictory findings on Aboriginal adolescents' attitudes to school. Jordan (1984) in her South Australian study found that Aboriginal students had a “positive view of schooling and school personnel” (p.289).

References

Dawson J.L.M. ( 1970) Aboriginal attitudes towards education and integration. In Taft R. et al., Attitudes and Social Conditions, Canberra: ANU Press

de Lacy P. & Fielding A. ( 1985) Australian immigrants and indigenes in the context of cultural reaffirmation: special or general educational needs. In Brock C. & Tulasiewicz W. . Cultural Identify and Educational Policy, London: Croom Helm.

Eckerman A.K. ( 1988) Learning styles, classroom management, teacher characteristics and rural - urban Aboriginal people: some thoughts. The Aboriginal Child at School, Vol. 16, 1, 3- 20.

Goodnow J. & Burns A. ( 1985) Home and School: A Child's-Eye View, Sydney Allen & Urwin.

Harris J.W. (June 1976) Aboriginal children in school. The understanding of cultural differences. Paper presented at the Conference for Teachers of Aboriginal Children, Narrandera.

Honeyman K. ( 1986) Learning difficulties of Aborigines in education, The Aboriginal Child at SchoolVol. 14. No. 3. 17- 37.

Jordan D. ( 1984) The social construction of identify: The Aboriginal problem, The Australian Journal of Education, 28, 3, 274- 290.

Willmott E. ( 1981) The culture of literacy. In Menary B. (Ed.), Aborigines and Schooling, Adelaide College of Arts & Education.

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Published

1992-05-01

How to Cite

Gutman, D. B. (1992). Aboriginal Children Want to Learn ‘Good School Work’. The Aboriginal Child at School, 20(2), 12–24. Retrieved from https://ajie.atsis.uq.edu.au/acs/article/view/843

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Articles