Indigenous voices in higher education

By Eliza.Compton, 12 December, 2024
How to bring Indigenous expertise and experience into university teaching, research, leadership and student support
Indigenous voices in higher education
How to bring Indigenous expertise and experience into university teaching, research, leadership and student support
Indigenous voices spotlight artwork

First Nations knowledge has much to offer a world beset by crises yet Indigenous communities are under-represented across higher education, from undergraduate to vice-chancellor level. Addressing the issue goes beyond increasing the enrolment of Indigenous students – institutions must work to create more equitable pathways through school to admissions, tailor support on campus, and increase visibility in curricula and representation among faculty and university leadership. It’s time the academy started listening and learning from First Nations scholars’ lived experience, growing numbers of people recognise. This collection of resources from the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and beyond explores how institutions and academics can break down barriers to First Nations’ involvement in higher education and academia.

Indigenous perspectives in university curricula
Resources

A better understanding of Indigenous beliefs, values and practices is vital to integrating diverse knowledge systems into academia in a meaningful way. But broadening curricula to bring in Indigenous voices is often an incremental process. Steps can include embracing its interdisciplinary nature, connecting with community and industry bodies, and appointing First Nations staff to guide the process. 

A collaborative research culture
Resources
By Eliza.Compton, 29 May, 2024
Meaningful engagement with Indigenous communities requires researchers to shift away from conventional methodologies and towards more collaborative and participatory approaches. Here, Sarah Wiki-Bennett shares six key tenets

Open, accessible pathways and tailored support have been shown to boost Indigenous participation and success in higher education. In recognition of the strengths these students bring, institutions can create a welcoming campus environment in which students can build a sense of community – find out how. 

By Laura.Duckett, 19 October, 2024
Higher education pathways that enable equitable opportunities for students to gain the required academic knowledge and skills for successful study are essential for widening participation
Reading time
3minutes
Indigenous and First Nations leadership in higher education
Resources
By Eliza.Compton, 12 December, 2024
Good intentions and generalisations can harm reconciliation in the classroom and academy, writes Daniel Sims
Reading time
4minutes
By Eliza.Compton, 3 May, 2023
Increasing diversity at universities requires more than raising aspirations and enrolment among Indigenous and other under-represented students. Braden Hill offers seven ways leaders can address barriers to equity
Reading time
4minutes

Decolonising higher education means thinking differently, re-centring knowledge and listening to marginalised voices. This applies not only in the classroom, but also to how recruitment practices, cultural working norms, governance and well-being programmes are developed and managed. Non-Indigenous faculty and staff need to engage in this effort, as these resources explain. 

The journey towards decolonising the academy
Resources
By Eliza.Compton, 10 July, 2023
The interview process often rests on colonial perceptions of what counts as knowledge, how knowledge is generated and who ‘owns’ it. But researchers can use orienting questions to reflect upon and decentre this approach
Reading time
4minutes
By Eliza.Compton, 23 December, 2022
Decolonisation has the potential to rattle higher education’s sandstones and ivory towers, yet many struggle to know where to start. Karen Lambert and lisahunter use the context of initial teacher education in Australia to explain that it starts with you