Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

The Involvement of Ethnic Minority Communities in Education through the Arts: Intercultural Arts Education in Action


Affiliations
1 University of Botswana, GCC, Botswana
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


This study is based on my previous research which established that primary school children in the Kweneng West Sub District of Botswana, who are predominantly of BaSarwa and BaKgalagari ethnicity, show significantly poorer academic performance and display higher school dropout rates than the average learners in the country. The study is a pilot project conducted at a primary school in the village of Serinane in the Kweneng West Sub-district in Botswana. It aims at investigating the feasibility and efficacy of implementing 'Intercultural Arts Education' (ICAE) through a two-year project financed by the University of Botswana's Office of Research and Development. ICAE is an educational intervention designed by the researcher; it is based on the intercultural teaching of Creative and Performing Arts in collaboration with adult members of the community who represent the local 'ethnic minority' cultures. The study seeks to evaluate the impact of the introduction of ICAE on learners' attitudes towards school, cultural consciousness and academic performance and on teachers' attitudes towards their duties and the village community. The findings confirm that peoples of ethnic minority background are disadvantaged in the education system of Botswana due to cultural non-recognition. The study also reveals cultural misunderstandings between the stakeholders, namely teachers, pupils and community members with ethnic minority background. These misunderstandings have an additional negative impact on the education of children in Serinane. Nevertheless, the findings show that the stakeholders actually share a number of interests relating to the provision of education and that they believe they could benefit from collaborating in facilitating the process of teaching and learning. By observing increased learner participation during the research, and receiving positive evaluation from all stakeholders, the researcher concludes that ICAE has the potential to improve the quality of education in schools where pupils of ethnic minority background are enrolled. Introducing ICAE has proved to lead to more open and inclusive norms of discourse, lifting all involved to more powerful positions with an improved sense of self-worthiness. From the results of the study, the researcher gained the view that through striving for equality and mutual respect, ICAE provides a way to bridge the cultural gap between learners and the school, contributing towards the promotion of social justice and ontological security.

Keywords

Intercultural Arts, Community-Based Education, Social Justice, Ethnic Minority, Ontological Security, Culture of Dealing.
Subscription Login to verify subscription
User
Notifications
Font Size

  • Abella, R. (1991). Solidarity attack by exclusion: respecting equality and diversity. Queen's Quarterly, 98, 353-362.
  • Baumann, G. (1996). Contesting Culture: discourses of identity in multi-ethnic London. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Corson, D. (1998). Changing Education for Diversity. Buckingham: Open University Press.
  • Corson, D. (1998a). Community-based Education for Indigenous Cultures. Language, Culture and Curriculum, 11(3), 238-249.
  • Fraser, N. (1997). Justice Interruptus-Critical Reflections on the "post socialist" condition. New York: Routledge.
  • Holliday, A., Hyde, M., & Kullman, J. (2004). Intercultural Education: An Advanced Resource Book. London and New York: Routledge.
  • Iutzi-Michell. (1998). Political Economy of Eskimo-Aleut Languages in Alaska: Prospects for Conserving Cultures and Reversing Language Shift in Schools. In E. Kasten (Ed.), Bicultural Education in the North. Berlin: Waxman.
  • Khudu-Petersen, K. (2007). Intercultural Arts Education: Initiating Links between Schools and Ethnic Minority Communities Focussing on the Kweneng West Sub-District in Botswana. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, United Kingdom. Scotland, Edinburgh University.
  • Le Roux, W. (1999). Torn apart: San children as change agents in a process of assimilation. Windhoek, Namibia: Working Group of Indigenous Minorities in Southern Africa.
  • Le Roux, W. (2002). The challenges of change: A tracer study of San preschool children in Botswana. The Hague, Netherlands: Bernard Van Leer Foundation.
  • Lynch, K., & Lodge, A. (2002). Equality and Power in Schools: Redistribution, Recognition andRepresentation. London: RoutledgeFalmer.
  • Masire, Q. K. J. (2006). Very Brave or Very Foolish? Memoirs of an African Democrat. Gaborone: Macmillan Botswana Publishing Co (Pty) Ltd.
  • Mason, R. (1999). Multicultural Education and Global Reform. In D. M. Boughton, R. (Ed.), Beyond Multicultural Education. Berlin: Waxman.
  • Neperud, R., & Krug, D. (1995). People who make things: Aesthetics from the ground up. In R. Neperud (Ed.), Context, content and community: Beyond postmodernism (pp. 141-168). New York: Teacher's Press.
  • Richardson, R. (1996). Daring to be a Teacher: UK. Trentham Books.
  • Sekere. B. (2011). Secondary Education for San Students in Botswana: A New Xade Case Study. [Electronic Version] Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 1559-5706, Volume 5, Issue 2, 2011, Pages 76-87. DOI: 10.1080/15595692.2011.559772
  • UNESCO, w. o. (2005). Guidelines for Inclusion: Ensuring Access to Education for All. From http://unesd
  • University of Botswana, O. o. R. a. D. (2002). Improving Instructional Setting for Children of the Remote Area Dwellers (Consultancy Report). Gaborone: UNICEF; Ministry of Education; University of Botswana.
  • Whitecliffe, G. (1999). Issues of Multicultural Education in New Zealand. In D. Boughton & R. Mason (Eds.), Beyond Multicultural Education. Berlin: Waxman.

Abstract Views: 166

PDF Views: 0




  • The Involvement of Ethnic Minority Communities in Education through the Arts: Intercultural Arts Education in Action

Abstract Views: 166  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

Kelone Khudu-Petersen
University of Botswana, GCC, Botswana

Abstract


This study is based on my previous research which established that primary school children in the Kweneng West Sub District of Botswana, who are predominantly of BaSarwa and BaKgalagari ethnicity, show significantly poorer academic performance and display higher school dropout rates than the average learners in the country. The study is a pilot project conducted at a primary school in the village of Serinane in the Kweneng West Sub-district in Botswana. It aims at investigating the feasibility and efficacy of implementing 'Intercultural Arts Education' (ICAE) through a two-year project financed by the University of Botswana's Office of Research and Development. ICAE is an educational intervention designed by the researcher; it is based on the intercultural teaching of Creative and Performing Arts in collaboration with adult members of the community who represent the local 'ethnic minority' cultures. The study seeks to evaluate the impact of the introduction of ICAE on learners' attitudes towards school, cultural consciousness and academic performance and on teachers' attitudes towards their duties and the village community. The findings confirm that peoples of ethnic minority background are disadvantaged in the education system of Botswana due to cultural non-recognition. The study also reveals cultural misunderstandings between the stakeholders, namely teachers, pupils and community members with ethnic minority background. These misunderstandings have an additional negative impact on the education of children in Serinane. Nevertheless, the findings show that the stakeholders actually share a number of interests relating to the provision of education and that they believe they could benefit from collaborating in facilitating the process of teaching and learning. By observing increased learner participation during the research, and receiving positive evaluation from all stakeholders, the researcher concludes that ICAE has the potential to improve the quality of education in schools where pupils of ethnic minority background are enrolled. Introducing ICAE has proved to lead to more open and inclusive norms of discourse, lifting all involved to more powerful positions with an improved sense of self-worthiness. From the results of the study, the researcher gained the view that through striving for equality and mutual respect, ICAE provides a way to bridge the cultural gap between learners and the school, contributing towards the promotion of social justice and ontological security.

Keywords


Intercultural Arts, Community-Based Education, Social Justice, Ethnic Minority, Ontological Security, Culture of Dealing.

References