'Aborigines are smart' : children's responses to an Aboriginal Studies course: an ethnographic evaluation
Abstract
This thesis explores and evaluates one approach being
used in a number of Australian schools to transmit
information about and to establish attitudes towards
Australian Aborigines. The questions investigated revolve
around the central problem of what information is
transmitted and how this occurs in a classroom. The focus
chosen for this study is The People of the Western Desert a
course designed for 11-12 year old children.
It is argued that with recent efforts to introduce
Aboriginal studies into schools some kind of evaluation and
monitoring procedures should exist to ensure that teachers
and curriculum developers will be encouraged to strive for
new improved courses and resources. With this justification
then an anthropological approach to curriculum evaluation
has been chosen for it is felt that such methods will more
successfully answer and illuminate certain questions that a
curriculum of this kind poses than would the more
traditional forms of curriculum evaluation.
This evaluation has three aspects. First of all, the
Western Desert course is examined from the point of view of
its design, philosophical stance and context. Secondly, the
course is shown implemented in a classroom, and finally, the
children's responses to this course are evaluated. To
situate this evaluation, a background description of the
school and the classroom is given which points to some of the factors that may influence the outcomes of a course of
this kind.
The outcomes of the course are analysed in terms of the
children’s written and spoken responses. For the most part
they arose either through teacher-directed activity,
researcher's questions, or from recorded material collected
as a result of the researcher's participant-observer role in
the classroom. These responses reveal what the children
know and feel about Aborigines. Attention is directed to
the variation between what the children were telling their
teacher, their peers and the researcher with what they knew
and felt about Aborigines and what was being revealed of
their knowledge and attitudes towards them.
It is concluded that while a curriculum of this kind
may have problems in presenting a truly cultural relativist
perspective it can at least achieve a 'culture shock' type
experience. People can be made aware that other value
systems do exist and that their own are not necessarily the
only standard. However, in the implementation of the
Western Desert course a discrepancy was shown to exist
between the intentions of the curriculum developer and the
actual outcomes of the Hanley course. This discrepancy
arose because the teacher had not attended the in-service
course. Where the curriculum developer's goals concerned
values and the 'invisible culture' the Hanley course
emphasised the tangible elements of Aboriginal culture. These problems of interpretation demonstrate just how
difficult it is to encode in a course the values and
life-style of another very, different culture.
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