Indigenous Education
at IVG –
Learning for Life

A Different Vision of Education

In a world that is becoming increasingly fast-paced, loud, and performance-driven, many people are beginning to ask an important question:

What do children truly need in order to grow into strong, conscious, and free human beings?

More and more families are searching for alternatives to educational systems that are often focused mainly on conformity, pressure to perform, and the pure transfer of information.

In this context, one term is becoming increasingly meaningful:

Indigenous Education

But what does indigenous education actually mean? And why can it become a valuable path not only for children, but also for adults?

What Is Indigenous Education?

Education Centered Around the Human Being

Indigenous education focuses on the human being itself — not only on curricula, exams, or grades.

It views people as whole beings, including their emotions, talents, needs, creativity, and their connection to community and nature.

At the center is not the question:

“How much knowledge can be transferred?”

But rather:

“How can a person grow in a healthy, conscious, and self-determined way?”

Because of this, indigenous education often includes:

  • Learning Through Experience Instead of Pure Theory
  • Personal Development Instead of Constant Evaluation
  • Community Instead of Competition
  • Connection to Nature and Real Life
  • Encouragement of Individual Interests and Talents
  • Emotional and Social Development
  • Responsibility for Oneself and Others

Children do not only learn mathematics, language, or history. They also learn important life skills:

  • How do I deal with conflict?
  • How do I recognize my emotions?
  • How do I find my own path?
  • How can I think creatively and solve problems?

The Difference Between Indigenous and State Education

Two Different Approaches to Learning

Traditional state education is primarily designed to transfer knowledge in a structured and standardized way. Many children are expected to adapt to one system — regardless of their personalities, interests, or individual learning rhythms.

Indigenous education follows a different path.

While conventional education is often based on comparison, evaluation, and adaptation, indigenous learning focuses more on:

  • Individual abilities
  • Natural development
  • Emotional maturity
  • Sense of community
  • Self-responsibility
  • Practical learning

This does not mean that knowledge is unimportant.

On the contrary — knowledge gains deeper meaning when it becomes connected to real life.

A child who understands why mathematics is useful in daily life, or how communication strengthens relationships, often develops a far more natural motivation to learn.

Indigenous education therefore asks not only:

“What must a person know?”

But also:

“Who will this person become?”

Why Indigenous Education Matters

Supporting Emotional Strength and Authentic Growth

Many young people today grow up under enormous pressure. From an early age, they experience stress, overwhelm, constant comparison, and the feeling that they must always function.

As a result, important qualities are often lost:

  • Self-confidence
  • Creativity
  • Inner peace
  • Emotional stability
  • Genuine social skills

Indigenous education aims to respond precisely to these challenges.

It creates spaces where children and adults are encouraged to better understand themselves and discover their own strengths. Human beings should not become copies of a system, but individuals who are allowed to develop their own character and authenticity.

Especially valuable is the support of emotional and social competencies. A person who has learned:

  • to be empathetic,
  • to resolve conflicts peacefully,
  • to take responsibility,
  • to think critically,
  • to act creatively,

and to accept themselves,

carries abilities that can strengthen them throughout their entire life.

Indigenous education can therefore help young people grow into emotionally strong, conscious, and creative adults.

Education Does Not End in Adulthood

Lifelong Learning for Adults

Indigenous education is not only for children.

Many adults today feel that although they have accumulated a great deal of knowledge, they have also become disconnected from themselves internally.

Many people long to learn again:

  • how to live more consciously,
  • how to reconnect with their own values,
  • how to experience real community,
  • how to rediscover creativity,

or how to better understand emotional patterns.

Indigenous education can therefore also become a path of personal growth and self-discovery for adults.

The First Indigenous Learning Spaces Are Already Emerging Online

Human-Centered Online Learning

Although indigenous education is still a relatively young and alternative educational model, small learning spaces are already beginning to emerge online.

These learning environments are not focused on simply teaching children digitally or delivering as much information as possible. Instead, the human being and their development remain at the center.

Children’s interests are taken seriously and actively integrated into the learning process. Learning is allowed to become alive, creative, and individual.

The children are accompanied by so-called learning guides.

These guides do not see themselves as traditional authority figures, but rather as supportive companions on the learning journey.

They help children:

  • discover their strengths,
  • deepen their interests,
  • build self-confidence,
  • develop social competencies,

and find their own personal connection to learning.

In this way, a learning culture emerges that is built on trust, respect, and genuine human connection.

The goal is not to create perfect students, but young people who are allowed:

  • to feel,
  • to think,
  • to question,
  • to be creative,

and to consciously find their own place in life.

A Form of Education for the Future?

Creating Conscious Human Beings

Perhaps our time does not only need more knowledge, but above all more conscious human beings.

People who have learned:

  • to stay connected with themselves,
  • to take responsibility,
  • to act with empathy,
  • to think creatively,

and to find solutions together.

Indigenous education could become an important step toward this future — not as a rejection of traditional education, but as an invitation to make learning human again.

Thank you for reading.