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Brown, Meagan C.; Hawley, Caitie; Ornelas, India J.; Huber, Corrine; Best, Lyle; Thorndike, Anne N.; Beresford, Shirley; Howard, Barbara V.; Umans, Jason G.; Hager, Arlette; Fretts, Amanda M. – Health Education Research, 2023
American Indian (AI) communities experience persistent diabetes-related disparities, yet few nutrition interventions are designed for AI with type 2 diabetes or address socio-contextual barriers to healthy eating. We describe our process of adapting the evidence-based Cooking Matters® program for use by AI adults with type 2 diabetes in a rural…
Descriptors: Cooking Instruction, Budgets, Diabetes, American Indians
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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
Region 11 Comprehensive Center, 2024
Authentic learning experiences, including curriculum, are essential for healthy development. For South Dakota students, these experiences include opportunities to foster their connections with local communities, cultures, nature, and lands. This infographic provides teachers with guidance on how to build their understandings and skills, and with…
Descriptors: Authentic Learning, Tribes, Student Experience, Guidance
Joel Isaak Liq'a Yes – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The Dena'ina language is a well-documented Northern Dene Alaska Native language in south-central Alaska. The Dena'ina language is on the brink of going to sleep. The Dena'ina community strongly desires for the Dena'ina language to once again thrive in the community. Language-use within the community is a contributing factor to the health of the…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, Alaska Natives, American Indian Languages, Indigenous Populations
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Napoli, Michelle – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2019
As a profession that formed in relation to larger forces within science, psychology, and more, the field of art therapy is not immune to the systems of oppression woven throughout Western culture and has incorporated practices that, even unwittingly, perpetuate the oppression of American Indian peoples today. This article contextualizes the U.S.…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, American Indian Culture, Racial Bias, American Indian History
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Britton, Karla Cavarra – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2021
Tribal colleges and universities (TCUs) across North America are located in communities grappling with the economic devastation caused by the coronavirus outbreak. The pandemic has intensified the stress on many Native communities already struggling with issues of economic sustainability and public health. Yet COVID-19--or "Dikos…
Descriptors: Minority Serving Institutions, Tribally Controlled Education, Navajo (Nation), American Indian Culture
Region 11 Comprehensive Center, 2021
The Oceti Sakowin Essential Understandings and Standards (OSEUS), a vision of many individuals, tribes, and organizations for several decades, were realized through legislation in 2007. In 2021, the South Dakota Department of Education, South Dakota Department of Tribal Relations, Office of Indian Education, and Region 11 Comprehensive Center…
Descriptors: Federal Indian Relationship, American Indian Culture, American Indian History, Instructional Innovation
Molly A. Wolk – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Innate to the traditional science curricula taught under the auspices of United States public education are a Neoliberal axiology and Eurocentric epistemology (Howard & Kern, 2019) that do not meet the cultural needs of American Indian students (Cobern & Loving, 2001). It is inequitable that American Indian students do not see themselves…
Descriptors: Science Curriculum, American Indian Culture, Secondary School Science, Indigenous Knowledge
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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
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Chew, Kari A. B.; Nicholas, Sheilah E. – Journal of Comparative and International Higher Education, 2021
This article takes form following an exchange of letters in which the Chickasaw and Hopi authors reflected on an Indigenous mentorship relationship in higher education as the embodiment of a carved-out space for Indigenous ways of knowing and being. They begin the story of their faculty mentor-doctoral mentee relationship with the memory of the…
Descriptors: College Faculty, American Indians, Doctoral Students, Indigenous Knowledge
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DiMare, Cara – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2021
Traditionally, care for the environment has always played a role in the Dakota-Lakota way of life, which includes taking care of the air. As a tribal college originally chartered by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, Sitting Bull College (SBC) takes seriously its role as an institution guided by Lakota-Dakota culture, values, and language. These…
Descriptors: Tribally Controlled Education, American Indian Education, American Indian Students, Conservation (Environment)
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Ruef, Jennifer L.; Jacob, Michelle M. – For the Learning of Mathematics, 2021
As members of a research group taking initial steps for creating mathematics curriculum in an Indigenous language (Yakama Ichishkíin), we engaged with an unanticipated outcome: the ways Indigenous identities and homelands are fractionated, as part of ongoing colonizing harm. Our work centers on how mathematics instruction can help heal, by…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Curriculum, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge
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Kinch, Rosemary A.; Bobilya, Andrew J.; Daniel, Brad; Duncan, Sara – Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education, and Leadership, 2022
Indigenous storytelling is a transaction between narrators and audiences that can be expressed through Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK). TEK narratives, such as those of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI), can demonstrate ecological literacy by empowering audiences to co-create their engagement with the local environment of that…
Descriptors: American Indians, Story Telling, Indigenous Knowledge, Audience Awareness
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Carroll, Michael P. – Teaching Sociology, 2017
A section on "world religions" (WRs) is now routinely included in the religion chapters of introductory sociology textbooks. Looking carefully at these WR sections, however, two things seem puzzling. The first is that the criteria for defining a WR varies considerably from textbook to textbook; the second is that these WRs sections…
Descriptors: Sociology, Textbooks, Religion, Global Approach
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Lopez, Jameson D. – Journal of College Student Development, 2020
This article outlines Indigenous data collection as a methodology that expands a sampling frame by using tribal Indigenous cultural knowledge, such as creation stories like those of the Cocopah and Quechan nations, to address limitations found in the methodological quality of Native American survey data in currently available datasets. Indigenous…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, American Indian Culture, Standards, Data Collection
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