“Decolonizing Epistemologies and Worldviews in Education is a welcome addition to the epistemological debates on knowledge diversity. Knowledge production is fundamentally political and embedded in ideological and sociocultural factors that weigh in on what counts as knowledge, how it is produced and disseminated within specific political trajectories. The editors and contributors to this book disrupt the totalizing hegemonic western discourse of what constitutes school knowledge and education by incorporating a decolonial and/or indigenization worldviews in their arguments. This is an essential book for academics and scholars who want to engage in disruptive pedagogy in their classroom but have been afraid to try or are unsure how and where to start."Edward Shizha, PhD, Professor, Wilfrid Laurier University"Decolonizing Epistemologies and Worldviews in Education: New Ways of Knowing in Education and Policy is a welcome addition to the field of education. This edited volume presents varied research themes and methodologies across 14 chapters to bring clarity to the tension between knowledge systems and world views that impact education policy. Of importance in larger debates on racism and equity the book is timely and gives a strong base for scholars wishing to understand and enact a process of decolonizing curriculum, especially in postsecondary education. The authors give full attention to the varied understandings of decoloniality and coloniality as they begin to counter ways of thinking that are based on capitalism and Western modernity. Recognition is given to the varied ways in which the value placed on knowledge from the global North works to devalue and destroy ways of being and knowledge systems of the global South. The chapters provide for the process of decolonization to become a space of possibilities through use of embodied pedagogy; Ubuntu philosophy and recognition of 'learning as lifelong and life wide.'” Jennifer Kelly, PhD, Professor Emeritus, University of Alberta