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The Seeds We Planted Portraits Of A Native Hawaiian Charter School Paperback Noelani Goodyearkaopua

  • SKU: BELL-7299838
The Seeds We Planted Portraits Of A Native Hawaiian Charter School Paperback Noelani Goodyearkaopua
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Seeds We Planted Portraits Of A Native Hawaiian Charter School Paperback Noelani Goodyearkaopua instant download after payment.

Publisher: Univ Of Minnesota Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 7.61 MB
Pages: 352
Author: Noelani Goodyear-Ka’opua
ISBN: 9780816680481, 0816680485
Language: English
Year: 2013
Edition: Paperback

Product desciption

The Seeds We Planted Portraits Of A Native Hawaiian Charter School Paperback Noelani Goodyearkaopua by Noelani Goodyear-ka’opua 9780816680481, 0816680485 instant download after payment.

This book reveals the paradoxes of teaching indigenous knowledge within institutions built to marginalize and displace it.
In 1999, Noelani Goodyear-Ka‘ōpua was among a group of young educators and parents who founded Hālau Kū Māna, a secondary school that remains one of the only Hawaiian culture-based charter schools in urban Honolulu. The Seeds We Planted tells the story of Hālau Kū Māna against the backdrop of the Hawaiian struggle for self-determination and the U.S. charter school movement, revealing a critical tension: the successes of a school celebrating indigenous culture are measured by the standards of settler colonialism.
How, Goodyear-Ka‘ōpua asks, does an indigenous people use schooling to maintain and transform a common sense of purpose and interconnection of nationhood in the face of forces of imperialism and colonialism? What roles do race, gender, and place play in these processes? Her book, with its richly descriptive portrait of indigenous education in one community, offers practical answers steeped in the remarkable—and largely suppressed—history of Hawaiian popular learning and literacy.
This uniquely Hawaiian experience addresses broader concerns about what it means to enact indigenous cultural–political resurgence while working within and against settler colonial structures. Ultimately, The Seeds We Planted shows that indigenous education can foster collective renewal and continuity.

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