The history of indigenous education provision throughout Australia’s
remote areas is replete with instances of neglect, infrastructure shortfalls
and systemic underfunding. Every aboriginal child deserves the best
education probable and this has patently not been the case in the past. 【M1】__________
Indeed many aboriginal children in Australia’s remote north are still
unable to attend to secondary school in their own communities and 【M2】__________
children living in very remote outstation communities are still accepting 【M3】__________
only the most rudimentary of education services.
Aboriginal people in remote Australia face a great and deep
dilemma on engaging with the current education system. On the one 【M4】__________
hand, as Wyatt implies, education can be a pathway to social mobility,
can offer great economic returns and can be the key to alleviate social 【M5】__________
disadvantage.
However, education that does not allow for learning in your own
language but that is not inclusive of your social, cultural and economic 【M6】__________
values are not empowering. It is disempowering. 【M7】__________
At its worst, education can be the tool of acculturation and 【M8】__________
assimilation for remote aboriginal people. Education can usurp local social
structures and cause deep intergenerational divisions, and
education that is not connecting to the reality of a student’s daily life in 【M9】__________
remote community can seem utterly pointless, leading to engagement. 【M10】_________
【M7】
are—is