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Curating a connected community in virtual space: Solomon Islands Research Mentoring Tok Stori

journal contribution
posted on 2024-02-19, 08:35 authored by Kabini SangaKabini Sanga, M Reynolds, A Malefoasi, I Paulsen
This article examines the relationship between academic mentoring and tok stori, a Melanesian orality, in a digital environment. This relationship is significant where dispersal is an unintended consequence of the way development aid intersects with academic opportunities for scholars from less developed countries, and, consequently, country-focused academic communities remain undeveloped as education becomes individualised. This situation occurs despite the fact that the self is social and education is a common good in many contexts, such as Solomon Islands in Melanesia. Using the contributions of participants in the Solomon Islands Research Mentoring Tok Stori (SIRMT), we discuss the various kinds of support and outcomes that become possible when deliberate attempts are made to create a connected community through mentoring in virtual space. Among the findings are the significance of mentorship to personal and academic growth, the potential of deliberate community building through virtual means in Solomon Islands and virtual tok stori as a catalyst to developments the physical world.

Funding

Faculty Strategic Research Grant 2020: Sanga, Kabini | Funder: VP RESEARCH

History

Preferred citation

Sanga, K., Reynolds, M., Malefoasi, A. & Paulsen, I. (2023). Curating a connected community in virtual space: Solomon Islands Research Mentoring Tok Stori. Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 52(1). https://doi.org/10.55146/ajie.v52i1.330

Journal title

Australian Journal of Indigenous Education

Volume

52

Issue

1

Publication date

2023-01-01

Publisher

The University of Queensland

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2023-07-25

ISSN

1326-0111

eISSN

2049-7784