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Course Description

This course introduces students to principles for collaborating well with Indigenous communities. Course content provides learners with tools to ethically conduct community-based research with Indigenous communities by gaining deeper awareness of the historical context and becoming familiar with current guidelines and standards. Students will gain appreciation for the importance of data sovereignty, co-design, structural barriers and dialogue-based approaches to engagement. The course highlights leading Indigenous scientists and successful case studies to provide real life examples and expose students to the exciting work being done in Indigenous technoscience. Prerequisite: EXNS 2801.

Who Should Take This Course?

Beginner level

Learner Outcomes

  • Gain introductory knowledge about how research has been conducted with Indigenous peoples in ways that have been harmful and describe community-based participatory research.
  • Understand the principles of Indigenous data sovereignty, DNA on loan, and consider how this contributes to Indigenous governance being strengthened.
  • Compare Indigenous research guidelines and policy enforcement in Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the USA.
  • Describe principles of Indigenous sovereignty in research by learning from a case study in co-design.
  • Understand how Indigenous and scientific knowledges are both situated and drawn upon to solve challenges.
  • Describe principles of Indigenous navigation, transindigeneity and movement that enable respectful and strategic relationships with place and peoples.
  • Learn how to collaborate with local Indigenous peoples by undertaking intercultural practices that are needed when working on Indigenous lands, gaining awareness of structural barriers, and identifying how dialogue-based approaches can be used to decentralize power.

Course / Module Outline

  • Research Ethics
  • Data Sovereignty
  • Governance Through Sustainable Technology Development
  • Indigenous Navigation

Notes

Academic Lead:

Dr. Kim TallBear 

Course creators and instructions:

Dr. Jessica Kolopenuk

Recommendations

Textbooks

All material is available online and no textbooks are required.

Record of Completion

Printable certificate; non-credit transcript; digital badge

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CONTACT US

Email nsonline@ualberta.ca with any questions.

Testimonials

"The course was excellent. I didn't know I needed this course to prepare for returning to work, but it was crucial. The instructors were knowledgeable and helpful. The content shifted the way I look at science and how I teach it." Anonymous

 

Applies Towards the Following Programs

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Section Title
Indigenous Peoples as Collaborators
Language of Delivery
English
Type
Online - Asynchronous
Dates
Sep 24, 2024 to Nov 19, 2024
Delivery Options
Online - Asynchronous  
Course Fee(s)
Tuition Taxable non-credit $349.00
Drop Request Deadline
Sep 24, 2024
Transfer Request Deadline
Sep 20, 2024
Withdrawal Request Deadline
Sep 24, 2024 to Nov 19, 2024
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