Family+Stories=Research

Author:

Bobongie Francis

Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to draw on the author’s research involving girls who leave their Torres Strait Island communities for boarding colleges in regional Queensland, Australia, and the academic, social and cultural implications that impede the transition process between community and school. While this paper discusses some of the research outcomes, its main focus is the unique indigenous research paradigm “Family+Stories=Research”, devised for and utilised within this project. This paradigm centres on the Australian indigenous kinship system and was implemented in two specific phases of the research process. These were: the preliminary research process leading up to the implementation of the research project; and the data collection phase. In turn, both phases enable the cultural significance of the kinship system to be better understood through the results. Because observations and storytelling or “yarning” were primarily used through both phases, these results also endorse the experience of the participants, and the author – both professionally and personally – without requiring further analysis. Design/methodology/approach The indigenous research paradigm and methodology unique to this research project implements the kinship system, allowing the researcher to access the appropriate resources and people for the project. Prior to the data collection phase, contact with significant community members in both boarding colleges and the Torres Strait Region was made. The methodology implemented for the research project was ethnographic and used observations, individual interviews and focus groups. The views and experiences of 26 past and present students, and 15 staff, both indigenous and non-indigenous, across three different boarding colleges were recorded. Findings Through both phases of the research project, the kinship system played a significant role in the ethnographic research process and data collection phase, which focussed on two key areas encompassed within the kinship system: “business” and the “care of children”. Stories from the researcher and the participants confirm the significant role that the kinship system can play within the indigenous research paradigm: Family+Stories=Research. Originality/value The paper introduces an indigenous research paradigm and methodology designed around two factors: family and stories. This paper brings to light the impact of the kinship system used within communities of the Torres Strait Islands and explains how this system advantaged the research process and the data collection phase by enabling the researcher to freely access stories specific to the research project.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

General Social Sciences,Education

Reference24 articles.

1. What is the key to a successful transition for indigenous girls moving from their Torres Strait Island communities to a boarding college in regional Queensland, Australia?;International Journal of Technology and Inclusive Education,2017

2. Ngoelmun yawar, our journey: the transition and the challenges for female students leaving Torres Strait Island communities for boarding schools in Regional Queensland;The Australian Journal of Indigenous Education,2017

3. Telling stories: exploring research storytelling as a meaningful approach to knowledge mobilization with indigenous research collaborators and diverse audiences in community-based participatory research;The Canadian Geographer,2012

4. ‘My word’: storytelling and digital media lab, rigolet inuit community government, storytelling in a digital age: digital storytelling as an emerging narrative method for preserving and promoting indigenous oral wisdom;Qualitative Research Journal,2012

5. Dudgeon, P., Wright, M., Paradies, Y., Garvey, D. and Walker, I. (2010), “The social, cultural and historical context of aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians”, in Purdie, Nola, Dudgeon, Pat and Walker, R. (Eds), Working Together: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Mental Health and Wellbeing Principles and Practice, Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, Canberra, pp. 25-42.

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