Decolonising the school experience through poetry to foreground truth-telling and cognitive justice

Author:

Manathunga Catherine1,Davidow Shelley1,Williams Paul2,Willis Alison1,Raciti Maria2,Gilbey Kathryn3,Stanton Sue3,O’Chin Hope4,Chan Alison5

Affiliation:

1. School of Education and Tertiary Access, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia; sdavidow@usc.edu.au (S.D.); awillis@usc.edu.au (A.W.)

2. School of Business and Creative Industries, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia; pwillia3@usc.edu.au (P.W.); MRaciti@usc.edu.au (M.R.)

3. Batchelor Institute, Australia; kathryn.gilbey@batchelor.edu.au (K.G.); sue.stanton@batchelor.edu.au (S.S.)

4. Kabi Kabi Elder (Sunshine Coast), Australia; hope.ochin@bigpond.com

5. Sunshine Coast, Australia; alisonhubychan@gmail.com

Abstract

While attempts to decolonise the school curriculum have been ongoing since the 1970s, the recent Black Lives Matter protests around the world have drawn urgent attention to the vast inequities faced by Black and First Nations peoples and people of colour. Decolonising education and other public institutions has become a front-line public concern around the world. In this article, we argue that poetry offers generative possibilities for the decolonisation of Australian high school (and university) curricula. Inspired by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander approaches to knowledge creation asintergenerational,iterativeandintercultural, and by postcolonial and decolonial theories, we explore ways in which poetry events can begin decolonising and diversifying the school curriculum. We suggest that poetry creates spaces for deep listening with the heart (dadirri) that can promote truth-telling about colonial histories and the strengths, achievements and contributions of First Nations Australians. These decolonising efforts underpin theWandiny(Gathering Together) – Listen With the Heart: Uniting Nations Through Poetry research that we discuss in this article. In these ways, we argue that decolonised curricula create the conditions for cognitive justice in schooling that is an important precursor to other forms of social justice, such as equality, diversity and inclusion.

Publisher

UCL Press

Subject

Education

Reference38 articles.

1. ‘Grafting Indigenous ways of knowing on to non-Indigenous ways of being: The (underestimated) challenges of a decolonial imagination’;C. Ahenakew;International Review of Qualitative Research,2016

2. ‘The 474 deaths inside: Tragic toll of Indigenous deaths in custody revealed’;L. Allam;The Guardian,2021

3. ‘The principle of beneficence in applied ethics’;T. Beauchamp,2019

4. ‘Making Black Lives Matter in academia: A Black feminist call for collective action against anti-blackness in the academy’;M. Bell;Gender Work and Organization,2020

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