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Ruth Plenty Sweetgrass-She Kills-De La Cruz; Claire Friedrichsen; Michael Barthelemy; Sonya Abe; Bernadine Young Bird; Kaya DeerInWater; Tiana Dubois – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2025
Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College (NHSC) in North Dakota is a tribal college chartered by the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara (MHA) Nation to serve as the agency responsible for higher education on the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation in order to train tribal members and retain tribal cultures. With the preservation and revitalization of tribal culture…
Descriptors: Tribally Controlled Education, Minority Serving Institutions, Tribal Sovereignty, American Indian Reservations
Katerin Elizabeth Arias-Ortega; Viviana Villarroel Cárdenas; Carlos Sanhueza-Estay – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2024
The article reports on the dispossession of indigenous knowledge in the public education system in Mapuche territory in La Araucanía, a southern region in Chile. The methodology is qualitative, 18 people were interviewed including Mapuche wise men and women, fathers, and mothers who experienced schooling processes in their younger years. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, American Indians, American Indian Education, Parent Attitudes
Amanda LeClair-Diaz; Christine Stanton – Rural Educator, 2024
This article describes storywork and collaborative meaning making as relational practices that can support stakeholder learning about curricular sovereignty with(in) rural Indigenous-serving school districts. While various treaties and policies exist to protect the educational interests of Indigenous Nations, enacting curricular sovereignty often…
Descriptors: Rural Education, Indigenous Populations, Constructivism (Learning), American Indian Education
Louis Garcia – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2024
According to anthropologists, the Hidatsa people resided at Spirit Lake, North Dakota, until circa 1500. A Hidatsa leader had a dream in which he was requested to move west to the Missouri River, where the Hidatsa then established a village near present-day Stanton, North Dakota (Bowers, 1992, p. 22; Milligan, 1972; Document on Hidatsa, n.d.;…
Descriptors: Tribally Controlled Education, Tribes, American Indians, Place Based Education
Jackson, Brian J. – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The vision of this doctoral project was to document Native educational leaders who center their school leadership in ancestral knowledge and the cultural practices of their communities as they lead from the middle. Leading from the middle acknowledges a cultural lens to compare that approach to the indigenous. Leading from the middle acknowledges…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Indigenous Knowledge, American Indians, Cultural Influences
David Swenson; Rebecca Engelman; Troyd Geist – Journal of Folklore and Education, 2023
The American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, houses the works of the ethnomusicologist Frances Theresa Densmore, including a collection of more than 2,500 American Indian songs she recorded between 1907 and 1941. Approximately 260 of Densmore's cataloged recordings were made at the Standing Rock Reservation in the Dakotas between 1911 and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Folk Culture, American Indian Culture
David E. K. Smith – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2025
I examine the educational properties of Iñupiaq songs and dances showing how they convey critical cultural knowledge, practical skills, and teach the value system of the Iñupiaq people. The practice of Alaska Native dance, a fundamental pedagogical strategy, was limited for 100 years by oppressive colonial forces. Framed in revitalization efforts,…
Descriptors: Cultural Activities, Alaska Natives, Singing, Dance
Vincent Werito – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2025
This article addresses critical issues of how Indigenous (Diné/Navajo) youth construct meaning of their racial, cultural, and linguistic identities within the historical, political, and socio-cultural contexts of the United States of America as a racialized, settler/colonial society. Using Tribal Crit theory, the author, a member of the Diné…
Descriptors: Navajo (Nation), Indigenous Populations, American Indian Students, American Indian Culture
Stephen Wall – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2025
The importance of the arts and humanities in today's world cannot be overstated. Challenges to our common humanity are arising in all societies on the planet. The arts and humanities can reconnect people to our shared humanity. For Indigenous communities, the shock of dehumanization has been a part of our history. Tribal colleges and universities,…
Descriptors: Art Education, Humanities, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge
Heather A. Bleecker; Jacob Ascencio; Ely Goklish – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2025
Teaching diverse student populations effectively requires implementing thoughtfully planned and flexible rich tasks and understanding a community's strengths so students can make meaningful connections to mathematics. Using a culturally relevant teaching approach can develop appropriate geometry vocabulary to support students in articulating their…
Descriptors: Geometry, Mathematics Instruction, Story Telling, Teaching Methods
Melissa Parkhurst – History of Education, 2024
Extracurricular activities such as sports and music offer a means to glimpse the complexity of students' experiences in federally-run boarding schools for Native children in the United States. Studies of music in residential schools typically include a mix of quantitative and qualitative sources, including "unexpected archives" such as…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Music, Indigenous Knowledge, Extracurricular Activities
Miguel Del Pino; Katerin Arias-Ortega; Gerardo Muñoz – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2025
The structure of the national educational system negatively affects the recognition of indigenous Mapuce people, who have been affected with regards to love, equal treatment and social esteem, as understood from the social justice approach of recognition described by Axel Honneth. This is evident in the indigenous knowledge and practices that have…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Native Language, Social Justice, Foreign Countries
Meenakshi Richardson; Cary Waubanascum; Sara F. Waters; Michelle Sarche – Infant Mental Health Journal: Infancy and Early Childhood, 2025
Indigenous lifeways, perspectives, and ways of knowing in the field of infant and early childhood mental health are underrepresented, especially given the inequitable and unjust prevalence of removal and separation of American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) children from their families and communities by the child welfare system in the United…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Infants, Preschool Children, Indigenous Knowledge
Sara F. Waters; Meenakshi Richardson; Sara R. Mills; Alvina Marris; Fawn Harris; Myra Parker – Child Development, 2024
Healthy Indigenous child development is grounded in Indigenous ways of knowing and being. Attachment theory has been influential in understanding the significance of parenting for infant development in Western science but has focused on child-caregiver bonds predominantly within the parent-child dyad. To bring forth Indigenous perspectives…
Descriptors: Caregiver Child Relationship, Tribal Sovereignty, Attachment Behavior, Indigenous Populations
Belinda Daniels; Tammy Ratt; Andrea Custer; Andrea Sterzuk; Melanie Griffith Brice; Russell Fayant – Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 2025
This paper contributes to ongoing conversations on the contextual differences and considerations between learning an Indigenous language as a member of an Indigenous nation or community and learning an Indigenous language as a non-Indigenous person (Albury, 2015; Berardi-Wiltshire & Bortolotto, 2022; May 2023; O'Toole, 2020; Te Huia, 2020).…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, American Indians, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction