A decolonial study of indigenous teaching and learning methods of knowledge transfer in Gabon’s rural commu
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University of the Western Cape
Abstract
Gabon is a country with an important ancestral cultural heritage that constitutes a set of
epistemological and ontological systems that can be traced back to the 15th century.
Europeans, with their colonising mission, wrongly presumed that African indigenous
people were ignorant and uneducated. Thus, Gabon remains one of the sub-Saharan
countries where access to education and forms of knowledge is exclusively established
on the Western hegemonic knowledge system. This study demonstrates how indigenous
knowledge contributes to education in Gabon via the implementation of indigenous
teaching and learning methods of knowledge transfer. The theoretical framework
underpinning the present study is based on decolonial theory as conceptualised for
research in the humanities, social sciences, and education. Qualitative methodological
approaches were used to determine the effectiveness of indigenous teaching and learning
methods in the process of transferring knowledge within Gabon’s rural communities.
Research instruments for data collection were observation, interviews, and focus-group
discussions. Fifteen villagers (indigenous trainers and trainees) from the village of Kery
were involved as main participants in the study. Data collection took place in Kery, but
data comparison and verification took place in the village of Inguendja with occasional
participants. A descriptive-interpretative approach was used to analyse the data.
Findings mainly elicit information on how rural people transfer knowledge and the
impact of indigenous knowledge on education in rural communities.