현재 위치

자료

The Clandestine Schools in Ecuador. Roots of Intercultural Indigenous Education
출판지역 | 출판년도 | 페이지: 
| 2015 | pp. 75-95
ISBN/ISSN: 
ISSN 0120-3916
저자: 
María Isabel González Terreros
지역: 
라틴 아메리카 및 카리브해 지역

By the mid-twentieth century in Ecuador, indians implemented clandestine schools to teach their people. Those schools were persecuted and harassed by landowners, who did not see pertinent that indians were educated. This was a pioneering, innovative and different project. Pioneer because it is the first known project with these features in Ecuador; innovative because it was leaded by Indians who took their cultural background to school (such as the teaching of ancestral language and some knowledge about nature and territory); and different because it was a proposal contrary to the homogenizing and assimilationist education that the Nation-state was implementing in rural areas. That proposal was led by Dolores Cacuango, a Quechua Indian who was subject to the hacienda system (in which communities did farm work for the employer, in exchange for a piece of land to live in with their families). She, who suffered injustice and had no chance to go to school, insisted that children and young people should "learn letter" (that is, they should learn Castilian).

파일: 
자료 타입: 
연구 보고서 / 학술논문
주제: 
다양성 / 문화 이해력 / 포용성
교육 분야: 
초등교육
중등교육
키워드: 
intercultural education
bilingual education
cultural diversity