Settler grammars and the Australian professional standards for teachers |
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Authors: | Nikki Moodie Rachel Patrick |
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Institution: | 1. Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia;2. School of Education, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia |
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Abstract: | In 2011, the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership introduced new Professional Standards for Teachers, which require that graduate teachers possess knowledge and understanding of Indigenous students and cultures. The authors conducted interviews with 12 non-Indigenous teacher educators at one Australian university in order to understand how these Standards are interpreted and implemented. We adopt Calderon’s framework of settler grammars to interpret the dialectic of presence and absence that teacher educators in our study describe. Extending this frame to an analysis of the Australian Professional Standards for Teachers, we find that settler grammars function to simultaneously erase Indigenous claims to sovereignty and epistemological equality, whilst promoting a representation of Indigenous people that asserts the primacy of the settler colonial state. |
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Keywords: | Indigenous education Indigenous curriculum teacher education graduate standards |
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