Teaching Purposeful Reading to Aboriginal Children

Author:

Christie M.

Abstract

In many aspects of formal education we expect Aboriginal children to think, learn and behave as white children. This is an unreasonable expectation because Aboriginal children in their home lives are seldom equipped with those skills which are necessary at school. Worse, teachers often don’t understand what skills are required in school learning because they are so fundamental to the task, and because white children display these skills so easily.This paper looks at the reading process from this point of view and identifies areas where Aboriginal children need to be taught specific skills before they can read with purpose. Suggestions as to how to teach these skills are included.The major aim of this paper is to look at ways in which teachers of Aboriginal children can improve reading ability. I believe that our teaching methods could be improved by concentrating on what I see as being the crucial difference between Aboriginal and White Australian (yolngu and balanda) children in the formal school setting. That is, that yolngu children do not expect to and do not participate in the school program in an active purposeful self-conscious way, but rather participate passively in the school learning process in the same way as they participate passively in their day-to-day home life. What I intend to do is talk first of all about this particular idea and then later about things that I hope or believe teachers can do about it.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Reference1 articles.

Cited by 6 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. The Literacy Game at Palm Island;The Aboriginal Child at School;1992-07

2. The Social Relationships of Tribal Aboriginal Schooling in Australia;British Journal of Sociology of Education;1987-12

3. Aboriginal Primary Education;The Aboriginal Child at School;1987-05

4. Australian Aboriginal Spatial Cognition and Dyslexia: A Criticism of Pontius (1982);Perceptual and Motor Skills;1984-04

5. Learning to Read the Aboriginal Way;The Aboriginal Child at School;1983-07

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