Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-fv566 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-20T14:12:51.743Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Nyungar Education in a South West Australian Location: A Perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2015

Terry Wooltorton*
Affiliation:
Edith Cowan University, Bunbury Campus, Western Australia
Get access

Abstract

Assimilation of the Nyungar kids into the system takes place. Those who assimilate better, do better in school. Those who don't assimilate well, have problems with the system. (John, Primary School teacher, 6/8/93) (cited in Wooltorton, 1993)

According to this teacher, assimilation is inevitable, therefore the school should assist that process. This paper examines and presents a perspective on the extent and effect of assimilation and suggests that the negative outcomes of the education of Nyungars is a result of assimilationist teaching practices and school culture. Further, it recommends that Nyungar education be underpinned by Nyungar control of Nyungar education, which consists of the followingprinciples: Nyungar decision-makers, Nyungar teachers, Nyungar parent involvement in educational implementation and decision-making and culturally appropriate teaching methods and teaching spaces.

Type
Section C: Conference Reports
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Coolangatta Statement on Indigenous Rights in Education (1993) Wollongong, Australia: World Indigenous People's Education Conference.Google Scholar
Education Department of Western Australia (1994a) Strategic Plan 1994-1996.Google Scholar
Education Department of Western Australia (1994b) Student Achievement in Health and Physical Education in Western Australian Government Schools.Google Scholar
Education Department of Western Australia (1994c) Student Achievement in Studies of Society and Environment in Western Australian Government Schools.Google Scholar
Gardiner, J., Evans, D. and Howell, K. (1995) ‘Suspension and exclusion rates for Aboriginal students in Western Australia’. The Aboriginal Child at School 23: 3235.Google Scholar
Katijin Nyoongar Advisory Committee (1989) Retention Rates of Nyoongar Secondary Students in the South of Western Australia: Phase One Report. Bunbury, Australia: Bunbury Institute of Advanced Education (Unpubl.)Google Scholar
Ministerial Council on Education, Western Australia (1993) 1992 Profiles of Student Achievement in English and mathematics in Western Australian Government Schools: Monitoring Standards in Education Project. Perth, Australia: Ministry of Education, Western Australia.Google Scholar
South Western Times (1993) ‘Education fails local Nyungars’. Thursday, 9 September.Google Scholar
Wooltorton, S. (1993) Nyungars at School: A Study of Cultural Difference and Underachievement. Unpublished Masters Thesis.Google Scholar