荔枝视频

May 3, 2021

Undergrads conduct reconciliatory research with Indigenous communities

Course-based experiential learning in College of Discovery, Creativity and Innovation promotes collaboration
Taylor Institute for Teaching and Learning.
Taylor Institute for Teaching and Learning.

As the winter semester draws to a close, Dr. Adam Murry, PhD, an assistant professor in Indigenous psychology, is excited about the ways his students鈥 research will inform recommendations and actions for their community partner, the Portland Committee on Community-Engaged Policing (PCCEP). Based in Portland, Ore., the PCCEP鈥檚 aim is to achieve equitable policing in their local communities through an informed, community-engaged approach, including evidence-based research.

Investigating the discourse on Indigenous experiences with police

Looking at news articles, scholarly publications and tweets, undergraduate students in Murry鈥檚 research stream in the new  conducted a content analysis on the ways Indigenous experiences with police are depicted. With expert guidance on the extensive process based on systematic review methodology from librarians, Dr. Alix Hayden, PhD, and Dr. Zahra Premji, PhD, students sampled ways that people talk about Indigenous interactions with the police in academic and popular media.

Theodore Latta, the project director for the PCCEP, recognizes the students鈥 crucial contributions. 鈥淎dam and I thought it would be interesting to look more in-depth about an underrepresented population that is overrepresented in police interactions,鈥 says Latta.

鈥淚t鈥檚 important and significant that there is a research stream of undergraduate students dedicated to researching Indigenous interactions with police.鈥 The results from this study will help inform community assessments at the local level, meant to improve relations between the police and Portland鈥檚 marginalized sub-populations.

Murry鈥檚 student-partnered research is one of four research streams in the pilot course, Research on Global Challenges led by Dr. Kyla Flanagan, PhD, at the College of Discovery, Creativity and Innovation (CDCI). As students participated in this experiential learning opportunity, Flanagan and Murry saw them developing research skills, including honing their discourse and quantitative content analysis skills as they dived into the research process.

Students鈥 research data will inform the second iteration of Research on Global Challenges in fall 2021. Using the data, Murry hopes to develop assessment tools like a topical map, focus groups and survey items. 鈥淢ost students wanted to do something substantial,鈥 says Murry. 鈥淭hey enjoyed taking responsibility over the research and approaching their research with authenticity and sincerity.鈥

A collaborative approach to student-led research with Indigenous communities

Valerie Fox, fourth-year International Indigenous Studies student and member of the M茅tis nation

Valerie Fox, fourth-year International Indigenous Studies student and member of the M茅tis nation.

Meanwhile, Dr. Adela Kincaid鈥檚 INDG 502.4 Applied Indigenous Projects course delivers on another CDCI initiative: . Kincaid, PhD, an instructor in the Department of Political Sciences, facilitates students to select projects that align with both their personal and Indigenous communities鈥 interests.

鈥淪tudents have articulated that they feel they鈥檙e contributing to reconciliation. I think this work is really important in moving relationships forward by being involved at the community level,鈥 says Kincaid.

Students in Kincaid鈥檚 CURE have also expressed the value of the research activity and its significance on their academic identity. 鈥淭his specific course has been everything that I had hoped my university degree would give me,鈥 says Valerie Fox, a fourth-year International Indigenous Studies student and member of the M茅tis nation.

Working as part of the research team led by Dr. Jennifer Leason, PhD, an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and Archaeology, and informed by Elder Evelyn Goodstriker, Fox investigated how rematriation, the act of acknowledging and restoring the matrilineal culture of Indigenous communities, can challenge colonization by contributing to improving Indigenous women鈥檚 maternal health and well-being.

A visual representation of rematriation, Fox鈥檚 painting below depicts the vibrant paths created by Indigenous women as they reclaim and restore their health and wellness through the colourful feather lines. Beneath the feather, seeds of life are planted to support the continual growth of Indigenous peoples and nations.

Artist credit: Valerie Fox (2021)

As an Indigenous student, Fox adds that opportunities such as the CURE in INDG 502.4 are crucial to laying the foundation for Indigenous students to become Indigenous researchers, 鈥淲hen you have undergraduate Indigenous students taking a course like this, conducting research, and doing that over years and years, that provides a foundation for future generations. I think that鈥檚 why it鈥檚 really important to continue offering courses like this.鈥

At the heart of the course-based student research experiences Murry and Kincaid provide is the intention to put students鈥 investigations into the service of community partners, and more important, in ways that integrate and value Indigenous perspectives. In turn, these opportunities fulfill the university鈥檚 aim to increase experiential learning opportunities for undergraduate students. The CDCI鈥檚 initiatives develop students鈥 research and professional skills while increasing engagement with the course content and forging deeper community connections.

The Research on Global Challenges and CURE pilot projects are the College of Discovery, Creativity and Innovation鈥檚 initiatives intended to expand undergraduate research opportunities and incorporate research into curricula. To learn more about these initiatives and how faculty members and students can participate, please visit the .

, the 荔枝视频鈥檚 Indigenous Strategy, is a commitment to deep evolutionary transformation by reimagining ways of knowing, doing, connecting and being. Walking parallel paths together, 鈥渋n a good way,鈥 U荔枝视频 is moving toward鈥痝enuine reconciliation and Indigenization.