Teaching(s) From Dis-ease: Grieving, Teaching and Surrender

Authors

  • Ramona Elke Simon Fraser University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40789

Keywords:

Indigenous Métissage; poems; poetic inquiry; Indigenous research; pandemic

Abstract

This work is a conversation with my fears and wonder in the early days of the COVID pandemic, in which I had to live and work as a high school teacher, parent, scholar and artist. Through the weaving of my poems, paintings and life writing in an Indigenous Métissage, I reached for the teachings I have learned from my Elders and Ancestors, longing to find ways to stay human during those most inhumane days, when dis-ease was worsened by social injustice. Through the refracted world of the pandemic came the distressing news of recoveries of unmarked graves at the sites of former residential schools for Indigenous children. This news re-wrote me, unwound me, and re-routed the direction I longed to go to make learning spaces better for youth. Through poetic inquiry, I attempted to process these findings and asked Creator and All My Relations, how to be useful to the work of healing in this dis-ease.

Author Biography

Ramona Elke, Simon Fraser University

Ramona Elke identifies as Anishinaabe/Metis/European and is an Arts Education doctoral student at Simon Fraser University. She is dedicated to bringing the transformative medicines of Indigenous pedagogies and methodologies into all aspects of her life in the attempt to create healing spaces for All Our Relations.

References

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Published

27-08-2024

How to Cite

Elke, R. (2024). Teaching(s) From Dis-ease: Grieving, Teaching and Surrender. Journal of the Canadian Association for Curriculum Studies, 21(1), 40–61. https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40789

Issue

Section

Curriculum Refractions Through a Pandemic Arc