Reflexive Openness as Collaborative Methodology

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Susan Thomson
2009 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 300-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shannon Speed ◽  
Maylei Blackwell ◽  
Rosalva Aída Hernández Castillo ◽  
Rachel Sieder ◽  
María Teresa Sierra ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 6-34
Author(s):  
Lucero Ibarra Rojas ◽  
Ezequiel Escobedo Osorio

Intellectual property and cultural policy are essential to the practice of cultural rights, however, in both legal frameworks, indigenous peoples have often found that the state has little consideration for their voices and their world views. In contrast, though no more representative of indigenous perspectives, the social sciences, while engaging with indigenous voices, have often treated them as a source to be appropriated with disregard of their rights and agency. Through an activist and collaborative methodology that includes the concerns of a wide group of indigenous and non-indigenous persons, this article explores how the oral history project of the Fogata Kejtsitani in the Purhépecha community of Cherán, México, contributes to discussions on the appropriation and dissemination of culture. This community has managed the recognition of their right to autonomy, and in so doing, has founded a continuous process of law creation, on which Kejtsitani takes part. La propiedad intelectual y la política cultural son esenciales para la práctica de derechos culturales, sin embargo, en ambos marcos jurídicos los pueblos indígenas frecuentemente han encontrado que el Estado tiene poca consideración por sus voces y cosmovisiones. En contraste, aunque sin ser más representativo de las perspectivas indígenas, las ciencias sociales que se han relacionado con voces indígenas, frecuentemente las han tratado como una fuente para ser apropiada, descartando sus derechos y agencia. A través de una metodología activista y colaborativa que incluye las inquietudes de un amplio grupo de personas indígenas y no-indígenas, este artículo explora cómo el proyecto de historia oral de la Fogata Kejtsitani en la comunidad Purhépecha de Cherán, México, contribuye a las discusiones sobre la apropiación y diseminación de la cultura. Esta comunidad ha logrado el reconocimiento de su derecho de autonomía y, al hacerlo, ha fundado un proceso continuo de creación de derecho del cual Kejtsitani también forma parte.


2017 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Mabel Andrea Ortiz-Navarrete ◽  
Claudio Heraldo Diaz-Larenas

This article aims to highlight the characteristics of the collaborative methodology for error correction of L2 students’ texts. The article points out the following components: interaction, dialogue, discussion, scaffolding, ZPD (Zone of proximal development), and positive interdependence; these components also favor the active participation of all members of a group during error correction. In addition, the paper emphasizes the way the collaborative work can activate the metalinguistic component, and can enhance the effect of corrective feedback provided by the teacher to a group.


Semantic Web ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 127-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dimitris Zeginis ◽  
Ali Hasnain ◽  
Nikolaos Loutas ◽  
Helena Futscher Deus ◽  
Ronan Fox ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-101
Author(s):  
Virginie Ladisch ◽  
Christalla Yakinthou

ABSTRACT∞ The Voices of Memory project started with a fairly simple premise: to highlight women’s life experiences under dictatorship. What started as a one-week workshop in 2017 evolved into a collaborative process of co-creation – the Voices of Memory project – using creative means of expression to help raise awareness of the impact of repression on Tunisian women. A formative principle, and primary contribution of this project, was a fully collaborative methodology. In this article, we reflect on and make explicit an approach we adopted intuitively and experimentally, drawing also on best practice in participatory action research and methods of co-creation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (13) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michele Barcelos Doebber ◽  
Maria Aparecida Bergamaschi

O crescente acesso de indígenas ao ensino superior, motivados pela busca de apropriação de ferramentas das sociedades não indígenas para a defesa de seus direitos, territórios e organização social, provocou, na última década, a consolidação de políticas de ingresso nas universidades públicas brasileiras por meiode cotas e/ou de outros programas específicos de acesso. Neste trabalho, apresentamos reflexões decorrentes de pesquisa de doutorado, a qual, através de uma metodologia colaborativa de inspiração etnográfica, cartografou movimentos do estar indígena na Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), bem como as repercussões dessa presença na instituição. Observamos que, ao chegarem à universidade, os jovens indígenas re-criam esse espaço, apropriando-se do universo acadêmico, dos conhecimentos ocidentais e, ao mesmo tempo, re-existem através de uma presença disruptiva que se expressa na linguagem, nas diferentes temporalidades, na lógica comunal, no compromisso com a comunidade e na re-existência epistêmica. Desse modo, o estar sendo indígena universitário dá-se na fronteira entre dois universos opostos e complementares. Nesse lugar, habita a potência do pensar indígena que, atuando entre dois sistemas de pensamento (da ciência ocidental e o próprio), pode causar rupturas na episteme hegemônica.YOUNG INDIGENOUS IN FEDERAL UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE DO SUL: movements of seizing and re-existingABSTRACTThe increasing access of indigenous people to higher education, motivated by the search for seize tools from non-indigenous societies to be used in the defense of their rights, territories, and social organization, led in the last decade to the consolidation of admission policies in public universities through quotas and/or other specific access programs. Here we present reflections resulting from a doctoral research, which, through a collaborative methodology of ethnographic inspiration, mapped movements of indigenous living at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Brazil, as well as the repercussions of this presence in the institution. We note that, upon arriving to the university, young indigenous people re-create this space, seizing the academic universe of Western knowledge and, at the same time, re-exist through a disruptive presence that is expressed in language, in different temporalities, in communal logic, in commitment to the community, and in epistemic re-existence. Thus far, living, being an indigenous university student, takes place at the border between two opposite and complementary universes. In this place lives the indigenous power of thinking, acting between two systems of thought (of western science and itself), can cause ruptures in the hegemonic episteme.Keywords: Indigenous students. Modes of re-existence. University. Interculturality.


2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. e240-e246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vicky Simanovski ◽  
Esther Green ◽  
Elaine Meertens ◽  
Leonard Kaizer ◽  
Noor Ahmad ◽  
...  

Participation in a collaborative enabled local interdisciplinary teams to develop processes and structures to support ongoing quality improvement, including formation of a sustainable structure for knowledge translation and exchange, but lack of a shared provincial target limited overall evaluation.


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