Indigegogy Minor
Indigegogy Program Learning Outcomes
1. Respectfully identify paths to and understand what is needed for decolonization and reconciliation, which may include:
• Describing how Indigenous knowledges and ways of knowing differ from Western scientific or academic forms of knowledge production and how these different ways of knowing can support each other.
• Explaining the structure of settler colonialism and its historical and intergenerational impacts on First Nations, Métis, and Inuit individuals and communities through legislation, policies, and systems that uphold anti-Indigenous racism.
• Describing how Indigenous peoples and communities are revitalizing, reclaiming, and resurging distinctly Indigenous ways of knowing, being, and doing.
• Describing past and contemporary settler colonial-Indigenous relations, including treaties, land claims, self-determination, self-government, and approaches to reconciliation.
• Describing the impacts of Indian Residential Schools, the Sixties Scoop, the Indian Act, and the Pass System on Indigenous sovereignty and nation-building.
• Describing contemporary and historical Indigenous resistance.
2. Apply an Indigenous relational perspective, which may include:
• Describing the importance of the concepts of relationality and interconnectedness within First Nations, Métis, and Inuit perspectives, and demonstrating how these central concepts can be applied to address different contexts and questions.
• Explaining how Indigenous knowledges and ways of knowing include community roles and responsibilities, connection to land and place, Two-Spirit kin, languages, and relations beyond the human.
3. Understand and develop Indigenous research and scholarship skills, which may include:
• Employing research methods that are both uniquely Indigenous methodologies and collaborative research methodologies that include both Indigenous persons and non-Indigenous persons (e.g., Two-Eyed Seeing or community-based participatory research).
• Evaluating research by centering Indigenous voices and lived experiences.
• Selecting Indigenous research methodologies that are appropriate for a topic of study, and demonstrating how research frameworks are relational, respectful, and responsible.
• Using Indigenous research methodologies to address contemporary Indigenous-settler relations.
4. Effectively communicate Indigenous ways of knowing and disseminate Indigenous knowledges, which may include:
• Employing a variety of oral, visual, and literary modes and media through means such as storytelling, song, dance, beadwork, and other art forms (i.e., Indigenous oracy) appropriate for different contexts and audiences.
• Practicing land-based knowledge production through harvesting, crafting, or otherwise engaging with Indigenous land-based experiential learning to understand relationship to the land.
5. Demonstrate Indigenous ethical practice, which may include:
• Practicing respectful protocol and acknowledging the relationships and responsibilities involved.
• Describing how ethical Indigenous research takes place within respectful, reciprocal, and collaborative relationships with partners and communities, wherein Indigenous communities are the holders of their knowledges.