The School of Education at Trent University invites applications from qualified candidates for a SSHRC Tier 2 Canada Research Chair (CRC) in Indigenous Education—Language Revitalization and Pedagogy. Trent University is strongly committed to equity, diversity, and inclusion, and to Indigenization within our community, and to developing an inclusive work environment that reflects the diversity of the broader population we serve.
This CRC in Indigenous Education—Language Revitalization and Pedagogy will support Trent’s School of Education by pursuing a program of Indigenous scholarship that advances the school’s commitments to decolonization and Indigenization, grounded in a mission that emphasizes social and ecological justice, inclusivity, and sustainability in education. Innovative action-oriented strategies rooted in community engagement and empowerment related to the revitalization of Indigenous language should be central to their research. Owing to Trent’s location in the treaty and traditional territory of the Michi Saagiig Anishinaabeg, the School especially welcomes a focus on Anishnaabemowin and Anishnaabeg culture; however, research interests in other Indigenous languages and cultures are also appropriate.
The CRC will have expertise and an existing research program that includes alignment with the mandate of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. They will conduct research that relates to Indigenous language revitalization through applied education research to build effective curriculum, pedagogy and teacher education programming. The Tier 2 CRC will also establish relationships within the university that willfacilitate interdisciplinary scholarship. Their focus on Indigenous language and pedagogy will align with Trent’s Strategic Research Plan 2023-2028 (sustainable and healthy communities and environments) and reinforce the university’sreputation as a leaderin Indigenous education research.
Trent School of Education faculty are actively engaged in research programs that focus on social and ecological justice, inclusivity, and sustainability in education. Additional scholarly foci in the School include investigations of curricular best-practice, and theorizing educational foundations (history, philosophy, sociology of education, etc.). There are significant interests in community-based and arts-informed research methodologies amongst the School’s faculty. The Tier 2 CRC in Indigenous Education—Language Revitalization and Pedagogy will be cross-appointed between the School of Education and the Chanie Wenjack School of Indigenous Studies. The Tier 2 CRC will have teaching and service responsibilities attached to the School of Education, with the cross-appointment fostering collaborative pedagogy and research with faculty and students associated with the Chanie Wenjack School of Indigenous studies.
The School of Education is committed to creating new knowledge, integrating that knowledge in teaching, promoting ongoing professional learning and educational research, and providing leadership in fostering a community of learners, in concert with the University’s academic plan. School of Education programs include the undergraduate Teacher Education Stream, concurrent Bachelor of Education—Indigenous, a consecutive Bachelor of Education (second-entry undergraduate), a graduate diploma, and a Master of Education. Additionally, many of our faculty are appointed to, and supervise students in Trent’s Interdisciplinary Social Research PhD program.
In their role as a Tier 2 CRC, the candidate will promote a dynamic and sustainable research ecosystem using collaborative, community-engaged research methods that complement the research of other CRCs at Trent (e.g., Community-Partnered Social Justice and Study of the Canadian North). Theirfocus on language revitalization, cultural resurgence, and pedagogy will incorporate Indigenous research methodologies and ethics, including ceremonial protocols, relational accountability, and oral history. The successful candidate will have exciting opportunitiesto collaborate internally with researchersin the Chanie Wenjack School of Indigenous Studies, the Indigenous Environmental Sciences / Studies program, the Frost Centre for Canadian Studies & Indigenous Studies, and Boohweh Centre for Indigenous Knowledges and Languages. External partners could include Williams Treaty Michi Saagiig and six provincial school boards that partner with the School of Education. The School of Education and Trent have strong community partnerships that will facilitate collaborative research and mobilization of findings. The addition ofthe CRC will increase Trent’s capacity to address concerns of the Indigenous communities related to revitalization of language and culture.
Candidate Qualifications :
As a Tier 2 CRC, the candidate must be an emerging scholar who self-identifies as Indigenous. Preference will be given to thosewith teaching experience in Indigenous education (K-12 teaching or other communitybased experience). As an up-and-comingworld-classresearcher,they will have demonstrated influentialresearch and strength in securingmajor funding. They will facilitate the training of highly qualified personnel and attract excellentstudents and future researchersto Trent. Applicants who are more than 10 years from having earned their highest degree (where career breaks exist, such as maternity, parental,or extended sick leave, etc.) will have their eligibility for a Tier 2 Chair assessed through the program’s Tier 2 justification process. More information on eligibility can be found on the Canada Research Chairs’website.
Applicants should electronically submit :
For more information about Trent University applicants are invited to visit the Trent University Webpage or contact Dr. Hintelmann
Tier 2 Canada Research Chair CRC in Indigenous EducationLanguage Revitalization and Pedagogy • Peterborough, Ontario, Canada