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Cooperative Cross-Cultural Instruction: The Value of Multi-cultural Collaboration in the Coteaching of Topics of Worldview, Knowledge Traditions, and Epistemologies
Arevgaq, Theresa John ; Koskey, Michael
Arevgaq, Theresa John
Koskey, Michael
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Abstract
For four years (2011, 2013, 2014, 2015) two faculty members of the University of Alaska
Fairbanks’ Center for Cross-cultural Studies have collaborated to co-teach a course entitled
Traditional Ecological Knowledge (CCS 612). This course examines the acquisition and
utilization of knowledge associated with the long-term habitation of particular ecological
systems and the adaptations that arise from the accumulation of such knowledge. Intimate
knowledge of place—culturally, spiritually, nutritionally, and economically for viability—is
traditional ecological knowledge, and this perspective is combined with the needs of an
Indigenous research method to better understand and more effectively explore the proper role of
traditional knowledge in academic, cross-cultural research. This presentation and paper explores
the strategies tested and lessons learned from teaching students from a wide variety of academic
and cultural backgrounds including the social and life sciences, and the humanities, and from
Indigenous and non-Indigenous cultural origins. The instructors, too—and most importantly for
this endeavor—come from an Indigenous (John) and non-Indigenous (Koskey) background, and
though hailing from very different cultures and upbringings work collaboratively and with
genuine mutual respect to enable an understanding of variations of traditions of knowledge and
their application to academic research.
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Date
2016-03-06
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Research Projects
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Keywords
cross-cultural instruction