Abstract
The southernmost Thailand insurgency has increased violence since the early 2000s. It is a cause of learning loss and psychological stress among students, primarily Muslims. Having been exposed to unrest for a long time, students lack confidence and lose interest in learning many subjects, including physics. Culturally responsive teaching can provide a solution by searching for and using funds of knowledge embodied in physics concepts to facilitate meaningful learning and to build pride in their cultural identity. The present study aims to search for funds of knowledge that embody physics concepts to exemplify culturally responsive physics education. The study employs ethnography in which provincial culturalists and a curator of a local museum were interviewed in-depth, and the researcher immersed in and conducted observations of the creation of Bulan kites with local experts for an extended period of time. Meanings in the qualitative data were discerned using narrative analysis. The results indicate three assertions, as follows: (1) There are cultural artifacts in the southernmost provinces of Thailand that have the potential to be used in physics education. (2) The outsiders’ appreciation of cultural artifacts causes the local community and students to begin to value their own funds of knowledge. (3) Unrest has caused misunderstandings among non-Muslim Thais, which can be resolved using cultural artifacts and the stories behind them.
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This research was supported by the Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research, and Innovation of Thailand.
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Anantanukulwong, R., Chiangga, S. & Pongsophon, P. Funds of knowledge in Muslim culture in the southern border provinces of Thailand for culturally responsive physics education. Cult Stud of Sci Educ 18, 791–807 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11422-023-10170-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11422-023-10170-7