Cultural Learnings Foundations For Aboriginal Student Wellbeing
Cultural Learnings Foundations For Aboriginal Student Wellbeing
Cultural Learnings Foundations For Aboriginal Student Wellbeing
Cultural learnings
Foundations for Aboriginal student wellbeing
Cheryl Kickett-Tucker
Who I am
Cheryl Kickett-Tucker
My name is Cheryl Kickett-Tucker and I am a Traditional Owner, academic and
community development practitioner. I am a proud Wadjuk (Perth region) Noongar
Aboriginal from the south-west of Western Australia (WA) with traditional ties to
Ballardong and Yued Noongar people of the wheatbelt region of WA. I have worked
with Australian Aboriginal people all my life in the fields of education, sport, and
health and I am very passionate about using my research to make a real difference
to the lives of Aboriginal children and their families. I was the chief editor of the
award-winning text-book Mia Mia Aboriginal Community Development: Fostering
Cultural Security (Kickett-Tucker et al., 2016) and I have also begun writing
children’s fiction. I am a very keen amateur photographer who likes to capture the
strengths and positive elements of being Aboriginal. I am also a very active volun-
teer for Koya Aboriginal Corporation where I coach sport to many children and
youth after school, on weekends, and during school holidays.
Introduction
Aboriginal culture is strength, and acts as a protective force for children and fam-
ilies (Lohoar, Butera, & Kennedy, 2014, p. 2). According to the English language,
culture is defined as “the way of life of a people, including their attitudes, values,
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beliefs, arts, sciences, modes of perception, and habits of thought and activity…”
(Oxford Reference Dictionary, 2020). However, for Australian Aboriginal people
culture consists of protocols, identity, spirituality, food, languages, and lore (South
West Aboriginal Land and Sea Council, 2020). Importantly though, culture is the
very epicentre of an Aboriginal person’s life, living, and sense of self. It is based
on a different set of values and norms from ‘mainstream’ culture (Kickett-Tucker
& Hanse, 2016) and has a direct link to wellbeing (Kickett-Tucker, 2009; Priest et
al., 2013) and is important for identity development (Forrest, 1998). In schools,
evidence suggests that a positive Aboriginal identity via culture combined with
positive student identity increases the chances of successful school outcomes such
as attendance, retention, and academic grades for Aboriginal children and youth
(Purdie et al., 2000). However, how can teachers support a positive Aboriginal
identity via culture in the school environment? (Also see Chapter 5.) I will present
Shay, M., & Oliver, R. (Eds.). (2021). Indigenous education in australia : Learning and teaching for deadly futures. Taylor & Francis Group.
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the need for decolonisation of teachers’ perceptions, their teaching style, choice
of teaching content, and the teaching environment by exploring Aboriginal cul-
ture, identity, and student wellbeing via the lens of an Aboriginal worldview.
Firstly though, I will define and justify the use of the terms Indigenous and
Aboriginal in the Australian context. The term Indigenous is commonly used by
Australian politicians and government departments to refer to the First Peoples
of Australia and according to this definition it includes Aboriginal people and
Torres Strait Islanders (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2010). On Australia’s
eastern border, Indigenous is the preference, however, the term First Nations is
starting to appear in the literature and in conversation. In Western Australia,
however, my traditional lands, the term Aboriginal is a commonly accepted term
among the First Peoples and I will use this term in this chapter.
Aboriginal worldview
Aboriginal worldviews are important in this chapter and are specifically related
to pedagogy because they determine Aboriginal ontology (perspectives of real-
ity) and Aboriginal epistemology (Aboriginal ways of thinking about or know-
ing reality). A worldview refers to the ideas and beliefs which a group of people
hold about its world and the people and things in it (Arabena, 2008), providing a
road map in which to live, learn, and survive and thrive (Martin & Mirraboopa,
2003). The tools needed to journey on the road of life are integral components
of the Aboriginal worldview and include values, morals, and lore that guide and
support behaviour, attitudes, and perceptions (Kickett-Tucker & Ife, 2018). The
Aboriginal worldview works as a holistic lens that integrates, interconnects, and
interrelates a set of principles of relationships, respect, connectedness, and mean-
ing for how to learn, live, and be (Arabena, 2008).
Aboriginal perspectives of reality (ontology) and Aboriginal ways of thinking/
knowing of realities (epistemology) guide Aboriginal learning and, in the case of
schools, it also must guide the teacher, the classroom environment, the content,
and pedagogy. It is important that an Aboriginal lens is cast upon who teaches,
what is taught and how it is taught. For instance, the Aboriginal worldview is com-
munal and relational whereas the non-Aboriginal, Western worldview focuses on
individualism and objectivity (Bessarab & Ng’andu, 2010; Tuhiwai Smith, 2003).
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Shay, M., & Oliver, R. (Eds.). (2021). Indigenous education in australia : Learning and teaching for deadly futures. Taylor & Francis Group.
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▼▼ Table4.1
Aboriginal ways of thinking (epistemology)
roamed the earth, but it is also the life spirit which ties man, society
and nature, both past and present, to the living now.
(O’Keefe, 1984, p. 50)
Aboriginal people engage in an oral society and use storytelling to make sense of
their reality. However, since the stories use cultural and archetypal metaphors to
explain morals and values from the Dreaming, the results provide endless possi-
bilities for one story or one reality. What this means is that there are multiple nar-
ratives to describe multiple realities in the Aboriginal worldview. Narratives are
told by Aboriginal storytellers (teachers) within a spiritual and relational world-
view. This is in direct contrast to the non-Aboriginal, Western worldview where
stories are told from a rational and material lens (Kickett-Tucker & Ife, 2018).
Shay, M., & Oliver, R. (Eds.). (2021). Indigenous education in australia : Learning and teaching for deadly futures. Taylor & Francis Group.
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▼▼ Table4.2
Ways of doing (ontology)
Today, some 15 years later, Cheryl’s youngest child up-to-date and culturally appropriate information/
brought home HASS worksheets about Aboriginal worksheets about Aboriginal people and culture.
Aboriginal culture
Shay, M., & Oliver, R. (Eds.). (2021). Indigenous education in australia : Learning and teaching for deadly futures. Taylor & Francis Group.
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a social order led by Elders and shared in a kinship system whereby family are
central:
Family is at the heart of Noongar culture. Our family trees are vast.
Noongar ancestral connections are like an intricate system of roots,
reaching back to the Dreaming or Nyitting. Our people are con-
nected by kinships, the way stars in the sky form intricate constella-
tions, connecting points together to form a unique shape.
(South West Aboriginal Land and Sea Council, 2016)
The importance of culture is defined by the actions of Elders who share cul-
tural learnings as early as the birth of a koorlong (child):
Connection to identity
Identity is formed by the knowledge and feelings attached to family, kin, culture,
and country (Forrest 1998). Specifically, identity is “a part of an individual’s self-
concept that derives from his or her knowledge of membership in a social group
(or groups) together with the value and emotional significance attached to that
membership” (Phinney, 1992, p. 159).
Identity is a process that occurs over time. Culture is also taught over time
in which customs, values and beliefs are shared (Kickett-Tucker & Ife, 2018).
Identity and culture come together during the cultural process because it is a
shared phenomenon between social groups and culture which helps connect indi-
viduals to their Aboriginal identity (Victorian Indigenous Youth Affairs Council,
n.d; Kickett-Tucker, 2009). For young people, the identity process and connection
to culture is a focus because:
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A strong racial identity gives our children and youth hope for a
future, to be proud of who they are and where they belong, to be
connected to something bigger than themselves, to be connected to a
circle of strength, love and support.
(Kickett-Tucker, 2009, p. 131)
Shay, M., & Oliver, R. (Eds.). (2021). Indigenous education in australia : Learning and teaching for deadly futures. Taylor & Francis Group.
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education is the dominant environment, then culture and identity will come into
play because it has been shown that regular school attendance is one of the most
significant factors of Aboriginal school success (Hancock et al., 2013), but it is the
cultural disconnection experienced by Aboriginal children that is most threaten-
ing (Partington & McCudden, 1992).
Healthy and culturally sound Aboriginal identity is vital for Aboriginal chil-
dren as it allows them to feel “no shame to be yourself … secure … safe and part
of the community … self-confident … comfortable” (Kickett-Tucker & Coffin,
2011, p. 159). Culture provides a pathway for the future:
When they have culture first, they have the very thing that will hold
them strong throughout their lives, no matter what they choose to do
or where they choose to do it.
(Elder Eustice Tipiloura, 2014, p. 13)
These are highly valued feelings and morals that strengthen Aboriginal wellbeing.
In this way cultural connection is critical to identity and wellbeing. For Aboriginal
children to engage successfully in school, their culture, language, and identity must
be recognised, valued, and taught so that their self-esteem and wellbeing have a
strong platform from which to grow and strengthen their school engagement.
Connection to wellbeing
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…it’s about building self-identity, and with that as the foundation we
move to self-worth, self-belief, getting the kids to understand who
they are and be able to walk in two worlds.
(in Davidson, 2014, p. 1)
Research from other Indigenous peoples from around the world has shown that
cultural continuation protects lives and guards against suicide and self-harm. This
is also the case for Indigenous Sami and Canadian youth (Chandler & Lalonde,
2008; Silviken & Kvernmo, 2007).
Similarly, other studies have shown that a strong sense of one’s identity, and
pride is positively associated with psychological wellbeing and the ability to
develop strengthening strategies for dealing with discrimination and the chal-
lenges of daily life (Chandler & Lalonde, 2008; Kvernmo & Heyerdahl, 2004;
Umaña-Taylor, Yazedijian, & Bamaca-Gomez, 2004). In sum, racial identity
helps to develop resilience so that skills and knowledge are developed to assist the
individual to overcome and cope with life’s challenges (Jackson & Sellers, 1996;
Niles, 1999).
For Aboriginal children, a healthy and culturally sound Aboriginal iden-
tity is vital because it supports security through being part of the community
and encourages self-confidence. Furthermore, culture and identity help equip
Aboriginal children and youth with the skills required to manage adversity and
positively influence their self-esteem (Kickett-Tucker, 2009).
While school is a primary agent for social change, it is also a place that is predom-
inantly non-Aboriginal which may alienate Aboriginal children, causing them to
have a difficult time adjusting and in turn may lead to them experiencing confu-
sion and conflict in regard to their racial identity (Partington & McCudden 1992).
So how can a non-Aboriginal teacher influence their classrooms so that
Aboriginal students’ worldview and identity are acknowledged, respected, and
affirmed? Using the Aboriginal worldview that says everything in the Aboriginal
world is created and connected by relationships, then the first change must
begin with the non-Aboriginal teacher’s own relationship with themselves (see
Chapter 3). White privilege and the worldviews of teachers need to be acknowl-
edged in the everyday life of these professionals because it permeates their
Shay, M., & Oliver, R. (Eds.). (2021). Indigenous education in australia : Learning and teaching for deadly futures. Taylor & Francis Group.
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actions, reactions, and expectations toward Aboriginal people and particularly
Aboriginal students. To start with, it must be acknowledged that colonisation
has and continues to grant privileges to certain groups based on their ethnicity.
Colonisation is a severe imposition of Western knowledge systems, which do not
recognise, respect, or value the knowledge systems of the original inhabitants of
the land (Burchill, Higgins, Ramsey, & Taylor, 2006; Ife, 2013). An outcome of
colonisation is the privilege that is afforded to some and not others. Privileges
such as wealth, land, status, and opportunities are distributed to select groups.
Yet many Aboriginal people have not experienced such opportunities because
they simply don’t have that privilege.
First, to begin the journey of decolonisation in the school environment, the
teacher must be critically self-aware to identify and recognise his/her own posi-
tion of privilege and understand his/her position as part of the dominant colonist
population and recognise and re-focus his/her thinking and behaviours (again see
Chapter 3). To do this, the teacher needs to acknowledge that he/she is teaching
Aboriginal students and then must shift his/her view and intent accordingly. In
regard to view, the teacher must recognise that Aboriginal people have their own
worldview which will determine Aboriginal student values, perceptions, and atti-
tudes, which ultimately will impact behaviour. To actively recognise Aboriginal
student worldviews, the teacher needs to stop, reflect, and alter their ‘privileged’
judgements, expectations, attitudes, and behaviours toward Aboriginal students,
the curriculum, and how it is taught. Teachers must not impose their privileged
views and agenda within the classroom. Teachers must view Aboriginal children
as unique individuals who hold and share a worldview from the world’s oldest
living culture.
Second, the teacher must be aware and up to date with the Aboriginal ver-
sion of history (national and locally based events), particularly critical topics of
invasion, dispossession, and colonisation, and how these events have impacted
individuals, families, kin, locally based communities, and the wider Aboriginal
population. The teacher must reflect on how historical events manifest in contem-
porary Aboriginal Australia and think about the intergenerational trauma which
has impacted the thoughts, attitudes, and behaviours of Aboriginal people, their
wellbeing, and livelihoods. The teacher needs to acknowledge that Aboriginal stu-
dents endure the impacts of history in their everyday lives and are forced to navi-
gate such trauma when in a white-dominated social environment such as school.
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Third, the teacher must develop genuine, respectful and reciprocal relation-
ships with Aboriginal students, their carers, and Elders in the school community
(see Chapter 7). The relationship needs to journey to a genuine partnership and
one in which the teacher assumes a humble position whereby he/she actively lis-
tens and acts according to the wisdom shared with them from Aboriginal people,
especially their own students.
Lastly, teachers must acknowledge that while they are teaching Aboriginal
children, they may feel pain, anger, and frustration with the struggles experienced
by their students. They may share compassion and empathy and are, thereby,
part of the healing processes, but the struggle itself is an Aboriginal struggle and
teachers should walk alongside their students and Aboriginal community. Self-
determination for Aboriginal people is demonstrated when we control our lives,
Shay, M., & Oliver, R. (Eds.). (2021). Indigenous education in australia : Learning and teaching for deadly futures. Taylor & Francis Group.
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our reactions, and our legacy and the most appropriate response from compas-
sionate teachers is to walk beside not in front or behind. To do this, teachers needs
to consult Aboriginal carers and particularly Elders who will mark the space in
which to share in our journey.
This journey of discovery will only happen with active and sustained connec-
tion to Aboriginal people who will guide the way. Every journey requires prepara-
tion and in order to arrive at a destination, teachers must be patient in building a
genuine heart toward Aboriginal people.
Conclusion
Reflective questions
1. A worldview is defined as ideas and beliefs which a group of people hold about
its world and the people and things in it. What are your ideas and beliefs about
Aboriginal people? Where did you learn this? Compare your ideas and beliefs
with the Aboriginal worldview tables in this chapter. How will you make
amends to your thinking and teaching?
2. Reflect on Aboriginal culture and the current curriculum and resources used
at your school. How will you incorporate the local Aboriginal identity, lan-
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guage, and culture in what you teach? Who can help you?
3. Decolonisation is the first step to Aboriginal cultural security. Reflect on
your own perceptions and judgements of Aboriginal people and how you will
adjust so can you begin the journey toward decolonisation.
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Shay, M., & Oliver, R. (Eds.). (2021). Indigenous education in australia : Learning and teaching for deadly futures. Taylor & Francis Group.
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