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Thomas Trendowski – Strategies: A Journal for Physical and Sport Educators, 2024
This article describes two traditional American games and discusses how they can be implemented in a physical education curriculum. These games can be enjoyed by all students and can provide a wide range of benefits, including the continuation of the legacy of some of the most historic games in North America. Rationales such as multicultural…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Curriculum Implementation, Games, Game Based Learning
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Courtney L. Luedke; Daniel Corral – Journal of Higher Education, 2024
Undocumented students face significant barriers in accessing postsecondary education. Previous research has focused on how individuals and schools impacted their experiences of enrolling in college. This critical qualitative study of "testimonios" with 15 undocumented Latina/o students examines how their families shaped and supported…
Descriptors: Undocumented Immigrants, Higher Education, Educational Attainment, Barriers
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Davidson, Eric M.; Lopez, Jameson D. – About Campus, 2023
Native Americans are a critically underserved and under researched population in the United States (US) higher education system. Not only do American Indians (AIs) and Alaska Natives (ANs) enroll in vastly lower percentages than their nonnative peers, but they are also far less likely to persist to graduation and attend graduate school than other…
Descriptors: American Indians, Alaska Natives, College Students, Student Experience
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Pappas, Alisa M.; Buchanan, Sarah A. – Education for Information, 2021
Since the granting of Native American materials -- excavated in archaeological projects sponsored by federal and state governments across the United States in the 20th century -- to public repositories, museum professionals have sought to manage such collections with care. At the University of Missouri, students responding to the local mandate of…
Descriptors: American Indians, Land Grant Universities, Archives, College Students
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Browne, Laurie P.; Gillard, Ann; Garst, Barry A. – Journal of Experiential Education, 2019
Background: Summer camps are perhaps the most expansive outdoor experiential education (OEE) context in the United States today; yet, camp participants are overwhelmingly White and able-bodied, with most coming from middle- to upper-income earning families. Purpose: In response to Warren, Roberts, Breunig, and Alvarez's question "What will it…
Descriptors: Summer Programs, Socialization, Access to Education, Equal Education
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Taylor, Cynthia E.; Rehm, Megan A.; Catepillán, Ximena – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2015
This article presents a lesson in which least common multiples helps students not only develop a perspective on an ancient culture but also draw on the cultural background of classmates. The Maya calendar received a lot of attention in the years leading up to December 21, 2012, because of the mythological end of "creation." Co-author…
Descriptors: Maya (People), American Indian Culture, Mathematics Instruction, Middle School Students
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Daniel, Mayra C.; Burgin, Ximena D. – GIST Education and Learning Research Journal, 2019
Using a reflective exercise designed for this study, Guatemalan educators explored their students' and their own cultural capital. The "cultural capsule exercise" served as a vehicle to bring delicate issues that are difficult to discuss, but that are essential to effective schooling, to reflective conversations. A total of 108 teachers…
Descriptors: Cultural Capital, Student Attitudes, Teacher Attitudes, Cultural Background
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Sykes, Brent E. – Adult Learning, 2014
The cultural experiences of minority learners are often omitted from the formal curriculum leading to exclusion and a sense of cultural loss. In this study, the researcher's lived experience serves as the basis to develop a novel research strategy: transformative autoethnography. The researcher uses the method of autoethnography to more…
Descriptors: Minority Group Students, Cultural Background, Self Concept, Transformative Learning
Principal Leadership, 2013
The value that Native American nations place on deliberative experiential learning and oral reflection often is opposed to traditional practices in US schools. The inherent differences between those cultural approaches to learning have contributed to the large achievement gap between Native American schools and traditional public schools. In 2006…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, Experiential Learning, Oral Tradition
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Diana, Vanessa Holford – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2009
Standing Rock Sioux writer Susan Power's best-selling novel "The Grass Dancer" (1994) includes depictions of the supernatural and spiritual that do not conform to the Judeo-Christian or, in some cases, the atheist or rationalist worldviews of many readers. Power writes of ghost characters and haunted places, communication between the living and…
Descriptors: Dance, Ceremonies, American Indians, Literary Criticism
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Cohen, Erik; Allen, Ann – Educational Policy, 2013
This article explores the impact of standardization policies of the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) of 2001 on the American Indian/Alaska Native community and the ability of educational policy to promote sovereignty, liberty and equity within indigenous communities. Examining current research and data generated from the National Indian Education…
Descriptors: Standards, Language Maintenance, Federal Indian Relationship, Educational Policy
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Gronseth, Susie – Technology Teacher, 2008
Theodore Roosevelt School (TRS) is surrounded by culture and history. Located on the grounds of the former Fort Apache Army Post, TRS serves sixth- through eighth-grade native students, primarily from the White Mountain Apache Tribe. Tradition and culture are so much a part of the TRS students' background of experiences that teachers at the school…
Descriptors: American Indians, Art Education, Art Teachers, American Indian Languages
Ritchie, William A. – 1969
It is reported that the New York State Indians, descendants of Asiatic immigrants, participated in leading cultural episodes of the eastern United States. Since their remains illustrate processes of cultural growth, the New York prehistoric cultures are described in terms of archaeological findings under 3 major stages of development: the…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Anthropology, Archaeology, Cultural Background
Weewish Tree, 1975
Descriptors: Agriculture, American Indian Culture, Clothing, Cultural Background
Talbot, Steve – Indian Historian, 1974
The establishment of the Native American Studies program at the University of California at Berkeley (1969), which was the result of Indian student and community dissatisfaction, is presented. (FF)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, College Instruction, Cultural Background, Educational Needs
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