A Subjective Academic Narrative: Practice-Led Research and Indigenous postgraduate opportunities

The methodology of this paper continues the work I have done writing the 'subjective academic narrative' for publication within refereed academic journals. Storytelling is a basic human activity and the academy since the mid 20th century has begun to see its value rather than use it as the...

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Auteur principal: Arnold, Josie Jacqueline (Auteur)
Format: EJournal Article
Publié: Institute of Advanced Engineering and Science, 2013-03-01.
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042 |a dc 
100 1 0 |a Arnold, Josie Jacqueline  |e author 
100 1 0 |e contributor 
245 0 0 |a A Subjective Academic Narrative: Practice-Led Research and Indigenous postgraduate opportunities 
260 |b Institute of Advanced Engineering and Science,   |c 2013-03-01. 
520 |a The methodology of this paper continues the work I have done writing the 'subjective academic narrative' for publication within refereed academic journals. Storytelling is a basic human activity and the academy since the mid 20th century has begun to see its value rather than use it as the non-academic side of the dichotomy between thought and reason and feeling and emotion that the Enlightenment left as its residue of academic thought and knowledge. I use this methodology to enter into the privileged academic discussion and to add to it regarding the  relationship of Indigenous knowledge to the academy that remains a challenge in Australian Universities in this postmodern and postcolonial moment. This paper recognises the need to open discussion about how Indigenous people might be facilitated within the academy to bring their knowledge-models into the university and its traditional dominant knowledge systems. This paper looks at Practice Led Research (PLR) as a possible pathway for supporting the transition of Indigenous community scholars into university postgraduate courses. It explores how PLR contributes to an appropriate entry point into postgraduate studies for some Indigenous students who have significant life experiences and narratives and/or productions of artefacts that act to replace the breadth of undergraduate credentials. This paper identifies and explicates a nexus between Practice Led Research and Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) and Recognition of Current Competencies (RCC). In doing so, it provides a reference point for University protocols and practices regarding RPL and RCC.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.11591/ijere.v2i1.1715  
540 |a Copyright (c) 2012 Institute of Advanced Engineering and Science 
540 |a http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 
546 |a eng 
690 |a Keywords: Indigenous knowledge; qualitative narrative methodology; credentialing; knowledge recognition 
655 7 |a info:eu-repo/semantics/article  |2 local 
655 7 |a info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion  |2 local 
655 7 |2 local 
786 0 |n International Journal of Evaluation and Research in Education (IJERE); Vol 2, No 1: March 2013; 32-43 
786 0 |n 2620-5440 
786 0 |n 2252-8822 
786 0 |n 10.11591/ijere.v2i1 
787 0 |n https://ijere.iaescore.com/index.php/IJERE/article/view/4436/2152 
856 4 1 |u https://ijere.iaescore.com/index.php/IJERE/article/view/4436/2152  |z Get fulltext