The Aboriginal Independent Schools of WA
Like
any society, Indigenous Australians have always valued education
as a vital element in the process of social reproduction.
While the train of events following on from 1788 attempted to
destroy and replace the richness and diversity of Indigenous
education practices, there remains within contemporary
Indigenous Australian society a strong commitment to the
initiation and support of appropriate processes for the
education of themselves and their children.
The fifteen Aboriginal Independent Community Schools of Western Australia,
and other non-government, non-systemic Indigenous governed
schools in Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and the
Northern Territory, provide tangible evidence of this
commitment.
The first attempt in Western Australia to re-establish effective Indigenous
influence over the shape and direction of formal
institutionalised education took place in the 1950s at Yandyarra
in the Pilbara Region. However, despite the endorsement
provided by the District Superintendent for extending the
"stop gap" school established by the Nomads Group in
1953, the state government was not prepared to support them in
this endeavour.
The next attempt by the Nomads to establish a school took place
in the early 1970s and led to the successful establishment of a
school at Strelley Station in 1976. The significant
differences between this and their earlier attempt, however, lay
in the support they received from the Commonwealth Government
and their decision to set up their own school rather than
attempt to exert any influence over a government school.
Since this time, a further fourteen schools have been registered
and are currently operating in Western Australia. They are located in the
Kimberley, Pilbara, Murchison, Goldfields, Great Southern and
the Perth metropolitan area. The schools are autonomous
and do not operate as a system. They do, however, have
many features in common and are involved in a range of
cooperative initiatives such as this web site.
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