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Region 16 Comprehensive Center, 2024
In 2017, the Oregon Legislature enacted Senate Bill 13, known as Tribal History/Shared History. This bill was the culmination of decades of organizing and curriculum work by the nine federally recognized Tribes within Oregon. The law directs the Oregon Department of Education to develop a K-12 Native American curriculum in partnership with Oregon…
Descriptors: History Instruction, American Indian History, State Legislation, Elementary Secondary Education
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Nicollette Frank; Morgan P. Tate – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2024
In their work with young learners, the authors found that "We Are Water Protectors," written by Carole Lindstrom, of the Anishinabe/ Métis and Turtle Mountain Band of Ojibwe Indians, and illustrated by Michaela Goade, of Tlingit descent, was a powerful entry point for recognizing the ways in which Indigenous communities continue to…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Civics, Elementary Education
Region 16 Comprehensive Center, 2024
In 2017, the Oregon Legislature enacted Senate Bill 13, known as Tribal History/Shared History. This bill was the culmination of decades of organizing and curriculum development by the nine federally recognized Tribes in Oregon. The law directs the Oregon Department of Education to develop a K-12 Native American curriculum in partnership with…
Descriptors: State Legislation, State History, American Indian History, History Instruction
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Lydia Wilkes – College Composition and Communication, 2024
Avowing settler status positions settler scholars to join in storying less harmful futures for the discipline. This paper describes the author's journey toward continually avowing white settlerness through the Northern Shoshoni word daiboo' in the fulsomeness of its meanings, which include but also go beyond "white person," to help enact…
Descriptors: Whites, Social Justice, Racism, Indigenous Populations
Region 16 Comprehensive Center, 2024
Despite one in 25 students in Washington identifying as American Indian or Alaska Native (AI/AN), many Indigenous students and families feel disconnected from the education system. Native students rarely see their identities, cultures, or histories reflected in established curricula. Further, traditional curricula often reinforce settler-colonial…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, Alaska Natives, Indigenous Populations, Cultural Relevance
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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
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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
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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
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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
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Dani O'Brien; Josh Montgomery; Bezhigogaabawiikwe Hunter; Niizhoobinesiikwe Howes; Waasegiizhigookwe Rosie Gonzalez; Manidoo Makwe Ikwe; Kevin Zak – Rural Educator, 2024
We, four teachers in Ojibwe or majority-Ojibwe schools and three teachers in teacher preparation at a small ecologically focused liberal arts college, tell stories to reorient ourselves, centering place in ways accessible to our emerging practice. In these narratives, anchored in the seasons, we describe our challenges and successes in adapting…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Rural Areas, Teacher Education, American Indians
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Kayla Lewis – Multicultural Perspectives, 2024
Overwhelmingly, elementary social studies standards focus on Native Americans in past tense. If elementary teachers follow state curriculum for social studies, students are often not provided the opportunity to learn about Native people in the present. The purposes of this study were to (a) determine the number of current state elementary (K-5)…
Descriptors: State Standards, Social Studies, Units of Study, Elementary Education
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Corey Whitt – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2024
In this article, I analyze the interaction between America's federal Indigenous policy and music education as a distinct policy tool of Indigenous assimilation, tracing the transition from the Allotment and Assimilation Era to the modern Era of Self-Determination. Throughout United States history, music education has served the policy interests of…
Descriptors: Music Education, Land Settlement, Indigenous Populations, American Indian Education
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Heather J. Peters; Teresa R. Peterson; The Dakota Wico?a? Community – AERA Open, 2024
This community-based participatory research case study demonstrates how Dakota Wico?a? utilized Indigenous and feminist epistemologies to create, implement, and evaluate a cultural intervention, the Mni Sota Makoce: Dakota Homelands Curriculum, to increase Native 6th- and 10th-grade social studies students' peoplehood sense of belonging (Tachine…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, Student Attitudes, Sense of Community, Culturally Relevant Education
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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
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Cynthia Benally; Vanessa Anthony-Stevens – Thresholds in Education, 2024
Despite the recent anti-CRT (Critical Race Theory) movement within U.S. education, teachings of Native histories and perspectives have never been accurately taught, or even taught. From their perspectives as teacher educators in predominantly white institutions (PWI), the authors share counterstories from their existing IRB-approved research…
Descriptors: Critical Race Theory, Censorship, American Indian History, American Indian Education
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