body bg

Inform-Banner

Towards a good education in very remote Australia: Is it just a case of moving the desks around?

  • Year: 2013
  • Author: Guenther, John and Bat, Melodie.
  • Journal Name: Australian Journal of Indigenous Education
  • Journal Number: Vol. 42 No. 2
  • Publisher: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit
  • Published Location: Brisbane Qld
  • ISBN: 1326-0111
  • Country: Australia

The education system, as it relates to very remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities in Australia, faces challenges. While considerable resources have been applied to very remote schools, results in terms of enrolments, attendance and learning outcomes have changed little, despite the effort applied. The Cooperative Research Centre for Remote Economic Participation (CRC-REP) in its Remote Education Systems (RES) project is trying to understand why this might be the case, and also attempting to identify local solutions to the 'problem' of very remote education. The RES project is in the process of building its research program across five remote sites in the Northern Territory, South Australia and Western Australia. As the project begins, the researchers involved have begun to consider what are the assumptions behind the 'system' in its current form(s).

 

The article begins with an outline of the context of remote education in Australia within a rapidly changing global environment. However, the purpose of the article is to outline many of the assumptions built into remote education and to ask what the alternatives to these assumptions might be. The authors go on to ask questions about how a remote education system would approach some of the assumptions presented. The assumptions presented are based on a reading of the philosophical bases of education. The questions are designed to prompt a deeper discussion about how the values and worldviews of those living in very remote communities might be taken into consideration and acted upon.

Related Items

Are we making education count in remote Australian communities or just counting education?

For quite some time the achievements of students in remote Australian schools have been lamented....

The impact of crime prevention on Aboriginal communities

This research reviews current literature on crime prevention policies and programs which have a...

Red dirt thinking on power, pedagogy and paradigms: Reframing the dialogue in remote education

Recent debates in Australia, largely led by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island academics over the...

Share this with your friends

Footer Logo

Contact Us

Level 2, 53 Blackall Street
Barton ACT 2600
AUSTRALIA
Telephone: 02 6260 3733
or email us