*Please share widely*
Indigenous Knowledges and Open Education Edited Volume (Open Access)
Call for Chapter Proposals
The open education movement has provided a substantial improvement to the learning and
research needs of students, faculty, and community members. This has been done through
various barrier
free methods of publishing, and mitigates any financial strains that can occur. However,
within the open access movement there needs to be careful consideration for Indigenous
Knowledges, which are deeply rooted in community defined ethics and protocols, that do not
fit into ordinary academic contexts. Many conversations around open education (OE) focus
on a Eurocentric framework of copyright and intellectual property rights that are
sometimes in tension with Indigenous knowledge systems, and the goal of this volume is
to centre Indigenous ways of knowing, culture, experiences, and worldviews within the work
of open education pedagogy and advocacy work. The publication target date is summer
2023.
The following provides detailed steps for submitting a chapter proposal to this open
access edited volume. We encourage chapters (of 4000 to 6000 words, excluding references)
that are authored
with diverse representation and scholarship (including student authors where possible),
that reflect one of the following types of contributions:
* Essay (theoretical or conceptual paper grounded in the literature)
* Research paper (based on systematic exploration of a research question)
* Case Study (critical, evidence-based, and theoretically grounded reflections on the
intersections of Indigenous knowledges and open education)
CHAPTER PROPOSAL REQUIREMENTS
We ask that the chapter proposals be submitted by email to
donna.langille@ubc.ca<mailto:donna.langille@ubc.ca>, including the following
elements by March 15, 2022:
* Working Title:
* Abstract: Max 200 words
* Type of Contribution: (research, theoretical/exploratory essay, case study)
* Keywords: 3–6 keywords
* Contributor information:
Required information for each contributor, in the correct authorship order and as you
would like to see in print:
* Full name
* Institution name (in full, no abbreviations)
* Primary e-mail address
* Contributor bio (Max 100 words)
Please see the attached PDF for more information.
Sincerely,
Donna Langille
Kayla Lar-Son
Tashia Kootenayoo
Naim Cardinal
Brad Wuetherick
Donna Langille, MISt
(She<https://equity.ubc.ca/resources/gender-diversity/pronouns/>,
Her<https://equity.ubc.ca/resources/gender-diversity/pronouns/>,
Hers<https://equity.ubc.ca/resources/gender-diversity/pronouns/>,
They<https://equity.ubc.ca/resources/gender-diversity/pronouns/>,
Them<https://equity.ubc.ca/resources/gender-diversity/pronouns/>,
Theirs<https://equity.ubc.ca/resources/gender-diversity/pronouns/>)
Community Engagement and Open Education Librarian
UBC Okanagan Library
The University of British Columbia | Okanagan Campus | Syilx Okanagan Nation Territory
Phone 250 807 9233
donna.langille@ubc.ca<mailto:donna.langille@ubc.ca> |
http://library.ok.ubc.ca/ |
https://open.ubc.ca/
Respectfully acknowledging that I am an uninvited visitor on the unceded territory of the
Syilx<https://www.syilx.org/about-us/syilx-nation/> peoples.
If there is something I can do to make this email and its content more accessible for you,
please let me know and I will resend in a format that works for you.