Indigenous Peoples and Technoscience Microcredential Series
This microcredential series introduces students to the intricate connections between science and technology fields, broader dynamics of colonialism, and increasing demands for Indigenous governance of science and technology. Designed for professionals who work in science and ethics-related fields, these courses provide tangible examples of how non-Indigenous based science has had real-world consequences for Indigenous communities. By highlighting Indigenous accomplishments in the field, these courses outline how to lessen structural barriers for Indigenous science to flourish and how a relational framework is a decolonial way to partner well with Indigenous peoples.
There are three microcredential courses in this series:
- Indigenous Peoples as Subjects/Objects (prerequisite for the series),
- Indigenous Peoples as Collaborators and
- Indigenous Peoples as Scientists.
Instructors
Course Certification
Microcredential Details
Course Cost
$349 + GST (per course)
Delivery Format
Online, self-directed (asynchronous)
Record of Completion
Printable certificate; non-credit transcript; digital badge
Next Offering
April 2 - June 3
Level
Beginner
Completion Requirements
~ 10 - 12 hours/microcredential course; 3 courses to complete the microcredential series
Textbooks
All material is available online and no textbooks are required.
Transferable Course Credit
TBD
Students who successfully complete this series will be able to:
- Explain the historical and contemporary connections between science and technology and the dynamics of colonialism.
- Deconstruct commonly held conceptions of what science is (e.g. always neutral, apolitical, and “for the good of all”) and how it came to be understood in colonial societies.
- Describe the roles science plays and the responsibilities it has to societies and environments, particularly those relating to Indigenous peoples
- Analyze historical and contemporary relationships between Indigenous people and science and technology.
- Forecast how Indigenous-driven approaches to science and technology projects can strengthen and extend Indigenous governance and self-determination.
Alumni Professional Development Grants help University of Alberta alumni achieve their career growth goals by removing financial barriers to high-quality, meaningful career education and personal growth opportunities offered by the UAlberta and its partners.
Contact Us
Email nsonline@ualberta.ca with any questions.