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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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Hemming, Patricia; Shields, Patrick – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2015
The concept of a community college implies some connection to the community beyond mere setting. A tribal community college suggests even more--a college which maintains its roots in traditional Native culture and serves the tribal community in a unique way. Located in northwest Wisconsin within the traditional homelands of the Ojibwe people, the…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Tribally Controlled Education, American Indians, American Indian Culture
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Beck, David R. M. – American Indian Quarterly, 2010
From the late nineteenth century through the early 1930s a succession of collectors, ethnologists, and other scholars scoured the Menominee Reservation for data and items of material culture, which they presented to the American public through both publication and display. They did this with the cautious aid of Menominees they hired to provide…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, Tribes, American Indians
Moody, Heather Ann – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Wisconsin Act 31 was established for the purpose of addressing American Indian history, culture, and sovereignty within K-12 schools as a response to treaty rights issues in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Yet, in the 21 st century there remain issues with compliance throughout not only K-12 schools but also institutions of higher education. The…
Descriptors: State Legislation, Compliance (Legal), Teacher Education Programs, Public School Teachers
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Walter, Pierre – Australian Journal of Adult Learning, 2012
This paper examines how two sites of adult learning in the food movement create educational alternatives to the dominant U.S. food system. It further examines how these pedagogies challenge racialised, classed and gendered ideologies and practices in their aims, curricular content, and publically documented educational processes. The first case is…
Descriptors: Food, Adult Learning, Ideology, Agricultural Production
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Steen-Adams, Michelle M.; Langston, Nancy E.; Mladenoff, David J. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
The harvest of the Great Lakes primary forest stands (ca. 1860-1925) transformed the region's ecological, cultural, and political landscapes. Although logging affected both Indian and white communities, the Ojibwe experienced the lumber era in ways that differed from many of their white neighbors. When the 125,000-acre Bad River Reservation was…
Descriptors: Earth Science, Ecology, Tribes, Forestry
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Silvern, Steven E. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
In this article the author provides a case study of how differing geographical imaginations are at the center of state-tribal relations in the United States. Specifically, he focuses on the political conflict between the state of Wisconsin and the Wisconsin Ojibwe over the continuing existence and exercise of Ojibwe off-reservation hunting,…
Descriptors: Treaties, American Indians, Conflict, Court Litigation
Zehr, Mary Ann – Education Week, 2008
For decades, the Montana Constitution has made preservation of American Indian culture an explicit educational goal. Educators did little about it until 2004, when the state supreme court ruled that Montana had ignored its responsibility to teach about the state's seven tribes. That ruling jump-started an effort that has yielded curriculum…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian History, American Indian Culture, Tribes
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Doherty, Robert – American Indian Quarterly, 2007
This article examines a brief period of Lake Superior Ojibway history in detail. It describes the territorial dimensions of usufructuary rights and tells how one Ojibway community at Keweenaw Bay, William Jondreau's home, reorganized itself as an Anishnabe state in the 1840s and early 1850s. It also argues that this state-building grew out of…
Descriptors: American Indians, Tribal Sovereignty, American Indian History, Federal Indian Relationship
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Boatman, John F. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 1987
Reviews a historical overview of the American Indian tribes of Wisconsin, emphasizing the contrasts in lifestyle between the Chippewa and the Winnebago. Criticizes the book for its many unsupported, or inadequately supported, controversial statements. (SV)
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indians, Book Reviews, State History
Stiles, Cynthia – Common Ground: Archeology and Ethnography in the Public Interest, 1999
Examines the development of the Lac du Flambeau tribal historic-preservation program, 1 of only 18 tribal programs to have assumed the duties of a state historic-preservation office. Describes the Lac du Flambeau reservation in northern Wisconsin, its history, and school and community preservation activities. (CDS)
Descriptors: American Indian History, Chippewa (Tribe), Community Education, Cultural Maintenance
Danky, James P., Ed.; And Others – 1982
Conference proceedings on the Native American Press in Wisconsin and the Nation present speeches and presentations pertaining to current American Indian publications and examples of analysis and synthesis created by Indian scholars. Topics of speeches presented include: an interpretive framework for Native American discourse; the early years of…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indian History, American Indians, Freedom of Speech
Lurie, Nancy Oestreich – Winds of Change, 1991
The Milwaukee Public Museum's new exhibit presents a cultural and historical overview of American Indian adaptation and survival from the earliest peopling of the Americas to the present. Wisconsin Indians have been heavily involved in the development of the exhibit, particularly a contemporary area portraying a modern intertribal powwow. (SV)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indians, Cooperative Planning
Whaley, Rick; Bresette, Walter – 1994
Each spring when the ice clears, the Anishinabe (Chippewa) harvest fish from Wisconsin and Minnesota lakes. Their ancient subsistence fishing and hunting tradition is protected by treaties and reinforced by federal court rulings, but for years they were met by stones, racial epithets, and death threats hurled by local sports fishermen, resort and…
Descriptors: Activism, American Indian History, Chippewa (Tribe), Consciousness Raising
Dion, Susan – 1990
This curriculum unit introduces students to the long and complex history of American Indian-White relations in the area that is now Wisconsin. Five historical narratives cover: (1) a general background to Indian-White relations, initial culture contact, and items of cultural exchange; (2) trade, peaceful relations, and intermarriage between the…
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indians, Culture Contact, Federal Indian Relationship
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