Paul'e Ruwhiu’s research while affiliated with Massey University and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Indigenous learning practices: Creating reflective spaces for growth and transformation
  • Chapter

January 2023

·

4 Reads

·

3 Citations

·

Paul'e Ruwhiu

·

·

Nicolette Sheridan

During the pandemic, the pivot to emergency remote teaching highlighted the depth and extent of inequalities, particularly in relation to access to resources and literacies, faced by higher education institutions. Imported solutions that failed to take into consideration the constraints and cultures of local contexts were less than successful. The paucity of practitioners with blended and online learning design experience, training and education grounded in diverse contexts made local design for local contexts difficult to carry out. Although there is substantial research and guidance on online learning design, there is an opportunity to create a text deliberately oriented to practice. Further, online learning design, as a field of practice and research, is strongly shaped by research, experiences and practices from a hegemonic centre (usually in the Global North, where peripheries also exist). While many of the textbooks written from this perspective are theoretically useful as a starting point, the disjuncture between theory and practice for practitioners in less well-resourced contexts where local experiences are invisible, can be jarring. This book aims to create a space for learning designers whose voices are insufficiently heard, to share innovative designs within local constraints and, in so doing, reimagine learning design in a way that does not reproduce the binary power relations of centre and periphery. https://edtechbooks.org/ldvoices/indigenous_learning_practices

Citations (1)


... In many countries, a learning design process must attune to indigenous ways of being and knowing. As educational designers navigate this landscape, they must be informed by culturally responsive design (Green et al., 2023;Rātima et al., 2022), a design approach that appreciates, honours, and celebrates the cultural heritage, knowledge, skills, and attitudes that students contribute to a learning environment (Taylor & Sobel, 2011). Within the context of Aotearoa New Zealand, Māori principles and values are deeply rooted in ...

Reference:

Navigating the places we now inhabit: Stories of migrant learning designers
Indigenous learning practices: Creating reflective spaces for growth and transformation
  • Citing Chapter
  • January 2023