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Faster than the speed of white (noise): potential pressure points in research partnerships and processes

Version 2 2024-06-17, 15:30
Version 1 2015-09-15, 17:08
conference contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 15:30 authored by R Carnes
White noise occurs in the thinking, decision making and communication of dominant Settler cultures. It inhibits clear reception of messages, somewhat like the indistinct, fuzzy static of an un-tuned radio. As much a systemic issue as an individual one, it results from assumed privilege and lack of knowledge of worldviews other than the dominant. Until white noise is acknowledged, development of partnerships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous groups is likely to be limited by having to continually start at a point of inequality where nonIndigenous gaps in knowledge and understanding remain unrecognised. This paper/workshop considers challenges encountered while researching experiences of Aboriginal education in Western Australian prisons. Each pressure point occurred where the dominant world view prevailed without question. Discussion will focus on the specific pressure points of ethics approval, project development, informed consent and application of outcomes and findings. The paper asks the questions ‘Who decides what stories are created at these pressure points? What informs those stories?’ As individuals, we might not be able to crash through the white noise barrier but we can chip away and be transparent about its existence with the goal of eventually moving faster than the speed of white (noise).

History

Pagination

1-30

Location

RMIT University, Melbourne, Victoria

Start date

2015-09-03

End date

2015-09-04

Language

eng

Publication classification

E3 Extract of paper, E Conference publication

Copyright notice

2015, ANZSWWER

Extent

Book of abstracts

Title of proceedings

ANZSWWER 2015 : Building collaborations in education and research: beyond the rhetoric : Proceedings of the symposium

Event

ANZSWWER. Symposium (2015: Melbourne, Victoria)

Publisher

ANZSWWER

Place of publication

Melbourne, Vic.

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