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Starting Where They Are: Rethinking Aboriginal Early Childhood Education

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2015

B. Graham*
Affiliation:
S.E.A. Aboriginal Curriculum Bilingual, Dept. of Education, Professional Services Branch, Winnellie, N.T.
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Extract

Bilingual education programs are being developed in some remote Aboriginal communities that have retained their own languages and a high degree of traditional orientation. As bilingual education in the Northern Territory is today beginning really to mean bilingual/bicultural education, this means that Aboriginal teachers are expected to act in different ways from when they worked as Teacher “Aides” and assisted in programs that were solely based on the non-Aboriginal culture. It is also a new situation for many non-Aboriginal teachers who, particularly in the Early Childhood area, have been trained to work with small children and now find that their most significant activity is the interaction they have with adult Aboriginal teachers as they help these teachers work with children. This paper outlines an approach that assists teachers develop more meaningful early childhood programs for Aboriginal children, and in addition helps teachers function more effectively in their new roles.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1981

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