2017
DOI: 10.1007/s13384-017-0226-y
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Other ways of being: challenging dominant financial literacy discourses in Aboriginal Context

Abstract: Financial literacy education (FLE) continues to gain momentum on a global scale. FLE is often described as essential learning for all citizens, despite the bulk of initiatives outside the compulsory school classrooms focused on educating economically disadvantaged individuals. Informed by Indigenous ways of knowing, being and doing a critical discourse analysis of FLE facilitators resources used in train-the-trainer workshops in/for a Canadian Aboriginal community was conducted to identify dominant discourses.… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…As illustrated in Figure 1, the key themes we identified appeared consistently across resources, regardless of industry affiliation, suggesting that content does not vary based on who made or paid for the resource. Both the key themes identified and the consistency are generally in keeping with the dominant, conventional approach to financial literacy, which focuses on individual choice, rather than systemic constraints on those choices (Blue and Pinto, 2017). Eight of the thirteen themes were coded for in all three categories of resources.…”
Section: Findings and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…As illustrated in Figure 1, the key themes we identified appeared consistently across resources, regardless of industry affiliation, suggesting that content does not vary based on who made or paid for the resource. Both the key themes identified and the consistency are generally in keeping with the dominant, conventional approach to financial literacy, which focuses on individual choice, rather than systemic constraints on those choices (Blue and Pinto, 2017). Eight of the thirteen themes were coded for in all three categories of resources.…”
Section: Findings and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…The material-economic arrangements, such as the activities used in the workshop and the resources (FLE booklets), also enabled and constrained practice as participants began to compare the promoted financial practices with their own financial practices. Thus, a tension with Indigenous ways of knowing, being and doing [41] emerged when examining the individualistic wealth-accumulating FLE practices promoted in conventional workshops [8,42]. These tensions (often unspoken but felt), which may also be prevalent in other cultures, also affect relationships (social political arrangements) and practices such as establishing savings when a high percentage of the population is on social assistance: I don't see any new income or any new jobs coming about or anything that will grow the economy happening here at all.…”
Section: Critical Moment 1: Identifying Contextual (Or Site-specific)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An individual's feelings, thoughts and talking about guilt or shame (the sayings) may affect what s/he does with money (e.g., gives it away-the doings) and how they relate with others (the relating) at Community fundraising events. Thus, the connection of financial practices and the sayings, doings, and relating in a financial context become apparent [42]. Some of the reluctance for engaging with FLE workshops offered by outside organisations may be explained by a lack of understanding of communities' financial practices and community members' concern for others.…”
Section: Critical Moment 4: Concern For Others-financial Practices Inmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, as a number of academics have argued, financial literacy education is typically values-laden, with middle class curriculum content that is disconnected from many students' everyday financial realities, and potentially marginalising for those from culturally diverse and low socioeconomic backgrounds (Appleyard and Rowlingson 2013;Blue and Pinto 2017;Sawatzki 2014). Enterprise and entrepreneurship education discourses can be similarly neoliberal.…”
Section: Learning To Solve Real World Problemsmentioning
confidence: 99%