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Metzger-Andersen, Kristal Eilein – ProQuest LLC, 2023
To understand why Native American members are hesitant to enroll in higher education, it is necessary to understand this population's barriers to achieving this goal. Degree attainment by American Indians has remained consistently low while other minority groups have consistently risen. The focus of this qualitative single-case study was on…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, College Attendance, Barriers, Reservation American Indians
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Elizabeth Healey; Rosemary Aviste; Michelle S. Bae-Dimitriadis – Art Education, 2023
How can digital art--based research counter Indigenous eradication and settler replacement enacted by land-grant universities (LGUs)? How can non-Indigenous settlers ethically engage in decolonizing work? With these questions, our art-based research project emerged from a spring 2021 Pennsylvania State University (PSU) graduate seminar, Land…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Land Grant Universities, Racism, Decolonization
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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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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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James A. Bryant Jr. – Athens Journal of Education, 2023
The history of American Indian education has been one of colonialism and cultural erasure. From the first missionary educators who first came to the Indigenous nations of the Americas well into the twentieth century, Native children have been subjected to physical, mental and emotional abuse. This paper examines one program's efforts at reclaiming…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Culturally Relevant Education, Indigenous Populations, Dual Enrollment
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Marroquín, Craig A. – About Campus, 2023
The purpose of this paper is to illustrate how family, tribal, and on-campus cultural-specific support can lead to higher educational and cultural outcomes for Native American college students through the lens of transculturation. To address the lack of quantitative empirical research on what it means to self-identify as Native American and thrive…
Descriptors: College Students, American Indian Students, Cultural Influences, Tribes
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Lueck, Amy J.; Kroot, Matthew V.; Panich, Lee M. – Community Literacy Journal, 2021
Colleges and universities across the United States are recognizing the public memory function of their campus spaces and facing difficult decisions about how to represent the ugly sides of their histories within their landscapes of remembrance. Official administrative responses to demands for greater inclusiveness are often slow and conservative…
Descriptors: School Community Relationship, Writing (Composition), Undergraduate Students, Computer Uses in Education
Keri Bradford – ProQuest LLC, 2021
This study addressed Native American students' perceptions of their educational experiences, 142 years after the first federally-run, off-reservation Indian Boarding School opened, and their perceptions of how university staff, faculty, and administrators could better serve Native students. Qualitative interviews were conducted with five Native…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, Higher Education, American Indian Education, American Indian History
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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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Melanie M. Kirby – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2025
The Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA) is a one-of-a-kind college dedicated to contemporary Native American arts and open to all peoples. The curriculum at IAIA includes innovative and integrative approaches to the arts as they connect to culture and science. The celebration of art and cultural identity are included in IAIA's Land-Grant…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indian History, Land Grant Universities
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Lybeck, Rick – Palgrave Macmillan, 2020
This book explores tensions between "critical social justice" and what the author terms "white justice as fairness" in public commemoration of Minnesota's US-Dakota War of 1862. First, the book examines a regional "white public pedagogy" demanding "objectivity" and "balance" in…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Racial Bias, Whites, American Indian History
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Wafa Hozien – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2024
Preserving the Navajo language, or "Diné bizaad," is of profound importance for all Indigenous people in the United States, as Navajo is one of the more widely spoken Native languages yet is still facing the early stages of endangerment. Currently, the Navajo Nation, like other tribes, lacks a significant presence of community-based…
Descriptors: Navajo (Nation), Language Maintenance, Community Education, Native Language Instruction
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Mickey Vallee; Mary Weasel Fat; Samantha Fox – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2024
On October 20, 2023, Red Crow Community College ("Mikaisto") board of governors, elders, staff, and students made their grand entry into their long-awaited new campus. This marked a new era for adult education on the Kainai First Nation Blood Tribe, in Stand Off, Alberta, Canada. The college's former campus was located at St. Mary's…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Tribally Controlled Education, Minority Serving Institutions, Canada Natives
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Tachine, Amanda R.; Cabrera, Nolan L. – AERA Open, 2021
Family connections are critical for Native student persistence, yet families' voices are absent in research. Using an Indigenous-specific version of educational debt, land debt, we center familial perspectives by exploring the financial struggles among Native families as their students transition to a Predominately White Institution. Findings…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, American Indian Students, Paying for College, Family Attitudes
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Nash, Margaret A. – History of Education Quarterly, 2019
Land-grant colleges were created in the mid-nineteenth century when the federal government sold off public lands and allowed states to use that money to create colleges. The land that was sold to support colleges was available because of a deliberate project to dispossess American Indians of land they inhabited. By encouraging westward migration,…
Descriptors: Land Grant Universities, American Indian History, Educational History, Land Settlement
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