Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Inform: "Decolonizing Your Syllabus" by Dr Max Liboiron #11

Open
DragonflyStats opened this issue Aug 10, 2019 · 0 comments
Open

Inform: "Decolonizing Your Syllabus" by Dr Max Liboiron #11

DragonflyStats opened this issue Aug 10, 2019 · 0 comments

Comments

@DragonflyStats
Copy link
Contributor

Twitter Thread by Max Liboiron

https://twitter.com/MaxLiboiron/status/1160131991498567682


Decolonizing your syllabus is different than including some Indigenous writers in the schedule. A thread.

Inclusion is a form of diversification but it can also be violent. Inviting voices into spaces not built for them can often work against the well-intentioned goals of inclusion.

This is what is meant by tokenism where inclusion = sufficient action, but no structures change.

Also, colonialism is about settler/colonials gaining access to Indigenous land, knowledge, cultuare, etc, & mere inclusion of Indigenous writers, obtaining and "integrating" ideas to
enrich settler education can be a form of colonialism. Probably not your goal! So what to do?

First, I highly recommend reading Tuck and Yang's "Decolonization is not a metaphor," which talks about education explicitly.

Decolonization is not the same as inclusion, truth & reconciliation.
(link: https://jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/des/article/view/18630) jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/des/…

Decolonization means the repatriation of Indigenous Land and life. How do you do that in a classroom? You can start by learning & teaching about the colonial roots & ongoing structures
in your discipline. Botany? See Schiebinger & Swan's "Colonial Botany."

Statistics? Walter & Andersen's "Indigenous Statistics." Environmental studies? Grove's "Green Imperialism." But don't @ me for more- in truth & reconciliation learning the truths of
colonization is literally your job. Doing the work is crucial. Doing it w/ students is better.

A syllabus that shows how your discipline benefits from & perpetuates colonialism then working w/ students & colleagues to teach, do research & become citizens that do not perpetuate
those patterns so Indingeous land & life is repatriated..that's decolonizing your syllabus.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

1 participant