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Teaching Algorithms to Indigenous Students of Brazil's Amazon

Published: 18 February 2025 Publication History

Abstract

The Constitution of Brazil and its subsequent laws have established various rights and protections for Indigenous peoples, among them the right to Indigenous schools where their culture and native language must be taught, learned, and preserved as something alive and essential to their well-being. Brazil's National Digital Education Policy, which mandates the teaching of computing in K-12 education, is a recent development not yet implemented in indigenous schools, where access to computers and the Internet is still quite limited. To promote the inclusion of indigenous populations in higher education, the University of Brasília (UnB), in collaboration with Brazil's National Foundation for Indigenous Peoples, has created an admission pathway dedicated to students from these populations. In 2022, UNB's Computer Science Department welcomed its first three Indigenous students from the Ticuna community in the Amazon region of Brazil. The Ticuna people represent the largest indigenous ethnic group in Brazil. Ticuna students, computer science professors, and computer science students at UnB have collaborated to address the gap in the K-12 teaching of computing in Ticuna communities. This work describes the materials created by the indigenous students for teaching computing in their communities within the context of their culture and language.

References

[1]
Alex Guilherme and Édison Hüttner. 2015. Exploring the new challenges for indigenous education in Brazil: Some lessons from Ticuna schools. International Review of Education 61 (2015), 481--501.
[2]
Claudia Leonor López Garcés. 2002. Los Ticuna frente a los procesos de nacionalización en la frontera entre Brasil, Colombia y Perú. Revista colombiana de antropología 38 (2002), 77--104.
[3]
Jennifer Gail Luedtke. 2007. The Ticuna: Prehistory, History, and Language. In Mitochondrial D-loop characterization of the Amazonian Ticuna population. State University of New York at Binghamton.
[4]
Mariana Paladino. 2006. Estudar e experimentar na cidade: Trajetórias sociais, escolarização e experiência urbana entre ''Jovens'' indígenas ticuna, Amazonas. Rio de Janeiro: UFRJ/PPGAS, Museu Nacional (2006).
[5]
James Lamkin Sullivan. 1970. The impact of education on Ticuna indian culture: An historical and ethnographic field study. University of North Texas.
[6]
E Javier Ullán. 2000. Los indios ticuna del Alto Amazonas ante los procesos actuales de cambio cultural y globalización. Revista española de antropología americana 30 (2000), 291--336.

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    cover image ACM Conferences
    SIGCSETS 2025: Proceedings of the 56th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education V. 2
    February 2025
    493 pages
    ISBN:9798400705328
    DOI:10.1145/3641555
    Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for third-party components of this work must be honored. For all other uses, contact the Owner/Author.

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    Published: 18 February 2025

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    Author Tags

    1. brazil
    2. computing
    3. higher education
    4. indigeneous

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