Living in the Fringe of Society: An Auto/Ethnography of Chepang Youths in Higher Education
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Kathmandu University School of Education
Abstract
Education has helped me see the world through others’ eyes. This has greatly
benefited my family and me by providing me with the qualifications to compete in the
neoliberal-led employment market. However, the other Chepang graduates may not
have had the same experience. Growing up as an Indigenous Chepang community
member has its own set of hardships and struggles, with disability and gender adding
another degree of marginalization.
An Auto/Ethnographic approach is used to inquire oneself on our journey of higher
education, questioning ourselves on how do Chepang graduates describe experiences
of accessing, pursuing, and continuing higher education. The main research questions
here is what social and socio-economic hardships faced and what it means “to be
educated”for being a Chepang youths in accessing and continuing higher education,
and how do these challenges shape their educational choices and aspirations and how
higher education practices influence Chepang students’ learning experiences. I have
interviewed seven graduates and inquired myself as a main informant for the
dissertation research.
I examined the narratives through the lens of transformative learning theory,
Marxian perspective on education for interpreting education, curriculum and
pedagogy related issues, and Bourdieu cultural reproduction and production theory for
interpreting the knowing, reasoning and understanding of the educated participants
life style and their transformative role in transforming to them self, their community
and society. Together, these theoretical perspectives illuminate how higher education
functions simultaneously as a site of reproduction and possible transformation for
Chepang youths, perpetuating marginalization through cultural and epistemic
exclusion while potentially offering tools for understanding and challenging that
marginalization, a paradox that can only be understood through careful attention to
Chepang graduates' own narratives of their educational experiences and aspirations.
To conclude, although education plays both the role of fostering critical
consciousness, liberation or maintaining the status quo of oppression and several
studies mentions that higher education has the potential to raise critical consciousness
among Chepang youths, but it has not really been the case in reality. Education has
not really encouraged critical thinking and advocate to challenge the systemic forces
of marginalization. This study advocates for decolonized education that embraces
Indigenous knowledge and supports Indigenous Peoples' self-determined development
in Nepal.
