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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
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
Stewart, Derek A. – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2022
Research findings have shown that Native students succeed academically when culture is integrated into the school (Apthorp, 2014). However, most teachers working on reservations are non- Native and have limited knowledge of American Indian history (Martinez, 2013). Moreover, there is a gap in the literature about effective cultural integration…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Classroom Techniques, American Indian History, American Indian Students
Fishman, Eric – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2021
What purposes might literary translation serve in the K-12 classroom? In this article, I use practitioner research to explore a heritage language poetry translation project I taught with third and fourth grade multi- and monolingual students in a suburban independent school. Students interviewed family members about their heritage languages,…
Descriptors: Translation, Elementary School Students, Second Language Learning, English (Second Language)
Sarah Klotz – College Composition and Communication, 2017
This article proposes embodied and multimodal readings of student compositions from the Carlisle Indian Industrial School as a way to illuminate processes of assimilation and resistance. Drawing on Gerald Vizenor's concept of survivance and the ways that the field of composition has taken up Vizenor's work, I argue that the project remains…
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indian Education, Acculturation, Cultural Maintenance
Stephanie J. Waterman – Journal Committed to Social Change on Race and Ethnicity, 2019
This chapter begins with a brief history of higher education's role in assimilation, oppression, and removal of Indigenous people. A short literature review outlines the progression of higher education literature from deficit focused ideologies to current research that decolonizes and centers of Indigenous Knowledge Systems. "Sharing…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, Higher Education, Educational Research, Ideology
McCoy, Meredith – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
Middle school social studies lessons about American Indian people often leave the impression that Indians are part of a historical past that has little to do with America's present. Too often, lessons include information about Indian "extinction" due to diseases and warfare without discussing the ongoing resilience of American Indian…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Social Studies, American Indian History, Public Policy
Stanton, Christine Rogers – Multicultural Perspectives, 2015
Although previous research has described analysis of history textbooks in terms of multicultural education, limited attention has been given to teacher only resources, such as the "wraparound features" of teachers' editions. The study highlighted in this article applies critical discourse analysis to explore the potential for teachers'…
Descriptors: United States History, Textbooks, American Indians, Land Settlement
Daehnke, Jon – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
The recent bicentennial of Lewis and Clark's "Corps of Discovery" created increased interest in commemorations of this event along the entire course of the expedition's travels. In advance of the bicentennial, a number of states established Lewis and Clark commemorative commissions, museums at both national and local levels planned…
Descriptors: United States History, American Indian History, American Indians, Acculturation
Padgett, Gary – ProQuest LLC, 2012
The purpose of this study was to describe and explain the portrayal of American Indians in U.S. textbooks selected for review in Hillsborough County, Florida's 2012 textbook adoption. The study identified which of the textbooks under consideration contained the greatest amount of information dedicated to American Indians. The study then analyzed…
Descriptors: United States History, American Indians, American Indian History, Textbooks
Weber, Carolyn A. – American Educational History Journal, 2013
Millions visited the World's Columbian Exhibition in Chicago between May and October, 1893. World's fairs and exhibitions had grown and developed grander purposes since the first one in London in 1851: "Beginning as large international industrial displays and showcases for the new inventions and discoveries of science and technology, they…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, American Indians, American Indian Culture, Exhibits
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
Blansett, Kent – American Indian Quarterly, 2010
The Ozark Mountains occupy a large area within the state boundaries of southern Missouri, northern Arkansas, and northeastern Oklahoma as well as the southeastern-most tip of Kansas. Missouri and Arkansas make up the bulk of the Ozarks, while Oklahoma and Kansas straddle their outer rim. From 1800 to 1865 the Ozarks region was in constant flux, as…
Descriptors: Oral Tradition, American Indians, Sampling, Historians
Nelson, Elaine M. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2009
Eunice Woodhull Stabler. Eunice Stabler, or Thataweson , meaning "Pale Woman of the Bird Clan," was born in 1885 on the Omaha Reservation in northeastern Nebraska. During a period of continued transitions and federal assimilation efforts directed at the Omaha people--and Indigenous people throughout the United States--Stabler remained…
Descriptors: Public Policy, Educational Policy, Boarding Schools, American Indian Education
Lawrence, Adrea; Cooke, Brec – Qualitative Inquiry, 2010
This study emerges from a professional development workshop the authors conducted with elementary, middle, and high school teachers. The article highlights of responses of workshop participants, particularly their response that the law was about assimilation, in the context of "The General Allotment Act of 1887" and the Hopi Indian…
Descriptors: American Indians, Workshops, Secondary School Teachers, Faculty Development