A journey from hoops to academia
Photo: Professor Cheryl Kickett-Tucker from the School of Education
Before she joined Team Academia, Professor Cheryl Kickett-Tucker AM played basketball for the WAIS Rockets in the Womenâs National Basketball League from 1986 to 1987. Now, sheâs combining her love of basketball with research to change the lives of Aboriginal and vulnerable kids in her community.
Growing up, the 2019 WA Local Hero found a second home at her local youth centre where her talents on the court thrived. By age fourteen, she was representing WA in state and national competitions.
âBasketball was my saviour. It gave me a sense of purpose and the confidence to believe I could achieve any goal I set my mind to.
I trained almost every night. And when I wasnât training, Iâd be coaching junior players or umpiring games to pay for my uniform and other expenses that my family couldnât afford.â Â
âBut my mum had her reservations. â
She told me âyou canât eat a basketballâ. She knew how much I loved the sport but didn’t want it to be my whole life. She wanted more for me and my future â and so did I.â
So, on her motherâs advice, Professor Kickett-Tucker went on to pursue a tertiary education, graduating with a degree in sport science. Driven by a hunger for knowledge, she then completed a postgraduate degree that took her to the United States on an academic scholarship. It was here that she discovered her academic calling.
When she returned home, Professor Kickett-Tucker had one goal in mind â to help her people.
A proud Wadjuk Noongar woman, she found a way to keep sport at the centre of her research, examining the identity and self-esteem of Aboriginal children participating in school sport.
âAt the time, there wasnât much research on Aboriginal identity relating to sports.
âAs I got further into my research, I realised there were no psychometric measures developed by or for Aboriginal people. So, I made one.â
Funded by a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Postdoctoral Fellowship, Professor Kickett-Tucker developed a toolkit called âIRISE-C to explore the components kids’ identity and self-esteem. Today, this toolkit is used as part of the Moombaki Cultural Learning project.
is a research project funded by the Australian Research Council (ARC) and Âé¶čֱȄ. It is designed to strengthen Aboriginal childrenâs well-being by connecting identity, culture, country and kin.
Noticing a cultural learning gap in the school curriculum, the local Aboriginal community and primary school students worked together with the Moombaki Project team to co-create the much needed local placed based resources about Noongar culture, language and history right on the boodja (Country).
“Moombaki (which translates to âwhere the rivers meet the skyâ) is a multimodal, research-based program that combines virtual reality (VR), the classroom and on country learnings. We worked with children across three primary schools situated in the Weeipâs Maali Boodja (City of Swan) where I grew up and still live.
âItâs local place-based learning, so each school received resources tailored to the traditional owners lands on which they are situated. Itâs not a one-size fits all because Aboriginal culture is very diverse.

Photo: Students using the VR headset to explore Indigenous culture
âWhat our research has shown us so far is that the more Aboriginal children know about where they come from, the more self-confidence they have â and thatâs what they take with them through life.
âYou canât underestimate the power of belonging, and equally important, the proactive response of acceptance.
âTo deliver Moombaki in classrooms, we engaged local cultural educators from Koya Aboriginal Corporation- an Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisation founded by Cherylâs late father and respected Aboriginal Elder, Mr Allan Kickett, to deliver the program. Cheryl has also been instrumental in developing community programs for Koya over the past 20+ years and has a special affinity to community basketball service.
âOver the weekends, we bring the kids together to shoot hoops and yarn. It gives them the chance to connect with their mob, in a culturally safe environment, and express their strengths.
âOne young lady who I met at Koya eight years ago worked alongside me as a research assistant on the Moombaki project. Itâs such an honour to see our kids thrive.â

Photo: Curtin celebrates the success of the Moombaki program at the 2024 Curtinnovation Awards
Even in her free time, community is on her mind. In 2015, Professor Kickett-Tucker founded Kaat Koort n Hoops, a basketball lifestyle program where she continues her love of coaching junior players, both on and off the court.
âSports had such a huge impact on the trajectory of my life. It gave me opportunities beyond what I thought possible growing up in a disadvantaged area.
âReciprocity is important in Aboriginal culture. You have to give back, and this was the best way I knew how.â
Professor Kickett-Tucker and the team are now working on Moombaki 2.0 which will look at delivering the program to high school students.
Moombaki was recently awarded the 2024 Curtinnovation Humanities Award.
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