Whose knowledge counts? : Cultural literacy and epistemic justice in rural classrooms of Punjab
By: Preksha and Kaur, Kanwalpreet
.
Material type:
BookPublisher: Economic & Political Weekly Description: 61(25), Jun 20, 2026: p.127-134.
In:
Economic & Political WeeklySummary: What does it mean for a child in a Punjabi village to see their language, history and knowledge left out of the classroom? This study explores how cultural literacy and epistemic justice are essential to achieving the inclusive vision of India’s National Education Policy 2020. Conducted in rural schools of Mohali, Punjab, it draws on concepts such as Freire’s critical pedagogy, Fricker’s epistemic injustice and Santos’s knowledge pluralism. Findings reveal that English-dominated schooling often marginalises students’ local knowledge and voices. Although culturally responsive practices demonstrate transformative potential, exam pressure, rigid curricula and language hierarchies continue to limit meaningful inclusion and educational equity.- Reproduced
https://www.epw.in/journal/2026/25/special-articles/whose-knowledge-counts.html
| Item type | Current location | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Articles
|
Indian Institute of Public Administration | 61(25), Jun 20, 2026: p.127-134 | Available | AR139355 |
What does it mean for a child in a Punjabi village to see their language, history and knowledge left out of the classroom? This study explores how cultural literacy and epistemic justice are essential to achieving the inclusive vision of India’s National Education Policy 2020. Conducted in rural schools of Mohali, Punjab, it draws on concepts such as Freire’s critical pedagogy, Fricker’s epistemic injustice and Santos’s knowledge pluralism. Findings reveal that English-dominated schooling often marginalises students’ local knowledge and voices. Although culturally responsive practices demonstrate transformative potential, exam pressure, rigid curricula and language hierarchies continue to limit meaningful inclusion and educational equity.- Reproduced
https://www.epw.in/journal/2026/25/special-articles/whose-knowledge-counts.html


Articles
There are no comments for this item.