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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2010
AIDS affects thousands of American Indians and Alaska Natives: They have the third highest rate of AIDS diagnosis in the United States, despite having the smallest population. To tackle this problem, the federal agency has provided capacity-building grants to seven tribal colleges and universities (TCUs) for an innovative, peer-to-peer initiative.…
Descriptors: Health Services, Pilot Projects, American Indians, Alaska Natives
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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College, 2000
Discusses the tribal college virtual library project aimed at bringing digital opportunity to American Indian reservations by way of the 32 tribal colleges and universities in the American Indian Higher Education Consortium. Describes Bay Mills Community College's (Michigan) prototype virtual library and the expansion of this virtual library…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Electronic Libraries, Higher Education, Integrated Library Systems
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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College: Journal of American Higher Education, 1992
Draws from interviews with women serving as tribal college presidents in discussing the current and traditional roles of women in Indian society, why women lead 10 of the 28 member colleges of the American Indian Higher Education Consortium, the need for balanced leadership, and women's future role. (DMM)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indians, College Presidents
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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College, 2000
Relates Congress's demand that by the year 2003, more than half of the teachers in the Head Start programs must have at least an associate degree in Early Childhood Education. Summarizes the funding initiatives provided by the American Indian Program Branch to tribal colleges to begin educating Head Start personnel in their areas in response to…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Associate Degrees, Educational Needs, Federal Indian Relationship
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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College, 1999
Describes the benefits found by five tribal colleges, in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan, that collaborated to achieve a more culturally aware accreditation assessment. Contends that colleges must have measurable objectives and outcomes and that they should use data to encourage student success. (VWC)
Descriptors: Accreditation (Institutions), American Indian Education, Community Colleges, Educational Assessment
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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College Journal, 2000
"Never forget where you came from" is the unspoken mandate guiding Sinte Gleska University (SGU) in South Dakota. SGU and other tribal colleges help students and communities relate to the land and American Indian cultural traditions by training natural resource managers, planting gardens, building sustainable models and raising buffalo.…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Reservations, Animal Husbandry, Conservation (Environment)
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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College Journal, 2002
Reports on the history of the tribal college movement and the American Indian Higher Education Consortium (AIHEC). In 1973 there were six tribal colleges, today there are 33. The American Indian College Fund was formed in 1989 to raise money for scholarships, and in 2001, the fund distributed nearly $4.1 million in college scholarships. (NB)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indian History, American Indians
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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College, 1998
Describes the mission of land-based tribal colleges and universities to create educational math and science models, overcome obstacles in teaching, and keep native tribal students focused on their sense of place and culture. Asserts that faculty strive to make science important to students and encourage them to dream of positively influencing…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indians, Community Schools, Curriculum Development
Ambler, Marjane – First Nations Development Institute's Business Alert, 1994
This newsletter article addresses the increasing role of telecommunications and its effect on American Indian institutions. Advocates believe that telecommunications could make rural Indian reservations more viable places to live, work, educate children, and treat illnesses. Additionally, new technology could revolutionize reservation economies.…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Elementary Secondary Education
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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College, 1999
Describes the Department of Health and Human Services' (HHS) efforts to develop a comprehensive five-year plan that will change the way all HHS agencies deal with tribal colleges. Summarizes the conference held in Phoenix in January 1998 that brought tribal college presidents and departmental officials together to find common ground for developing…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Community Services, Federal Aid, Government School Relationship
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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College, 2000
Summarizes the focus of this Tribal College issue, which addresses the need for specialized education to meet American Indian students' individual needs. States that standardized tests are not effective measures and that special education evaluation and referrals are not a neutral, objective process. Asserts that the answers lie in individual…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Educational Needs, Educational Testing, Higher Education
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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College, 1997
Describes the W.K. Kellogg Foundation's initiative to improve Indian education, strengthen institutions, and mobilize resources by donating funds to tribal schools. (YKH)
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Donors, Educational Change, Educational Improvement
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Ambler, Marjane; Crazy Bull, Cheryl – Tribal College, 1997
Describes results of survey distributed to the American Indian Higher Education Consortium's 31 colleges. Findings from the 11 who responded indicate that both faculty and students conduct educational, scientific, and cultural (including local tribal communities) research, using a range of qualitative and quantitative methods. (YKH)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indian Studies, Cultural Maintenance
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Edinger, Anne; Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College Journal, 2002
Presents an interview with Gail Bruce and Anne Ediger, who, in the early 1990s, conceived the idea of building cultural centers on 30 tribal college campuses. States that they imagined the centers would simply serve as repositories for Indian artifacts; however, after years of fund-raising efforts and program obstacles, the buildings transformed…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indians, College Buildings
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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College, 2000
Provides an overview of the articles in this issue of the Tribal College Journal, which demonstrate how tribal colleges are gradually creating places where Native languages are safe. Asserts that a place where the language is honored is a place that education, too, becomes honored, and that recognizing Native languages leads to self-esteem and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, Educational Needs
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