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Showing 1 to 15 of 109 results Save | Export
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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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Burke, Susan – Journal of Social Work Education, 2019
This study explores the ways Indigenous social workers experience and learn about colonization and provides suggestions for educators who are tasked with teaching that material. Nine First Nations and Métis social workers in British Columbia were interviewed. Data collection and analysis took place using the research praxis "métissage"…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Foreign Policy, Counselor Training
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Bachewich, Laurie – BU Journal of Graduate Studies in Education, 2017
Aboriginal perspectives are a very important topic in today's educational system. There is an urgent need for educators to infuse these perspectives in classrooms and school culture, ultimately benefitting communities. However, in doing so, there are several challenges, including how to infuse these perspectives respectfully while embracing the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, American Indian Education, Indigenous Knowledge
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Yoon, Ee-Seul; Daniels, Lyn D. – Educational Policy, 2021
Little is known about the school choice practices of Aboriginal families in settler-colonial societies, where they have been removed from their ancestral lands and/or have been subjected to discriminatory educational policies. Through the lens of settler-colonial theory, this study elucidates the "spatially positioned" school choice…
Descriptors: School Choice, Land Settlement, Canada Natives, American Indians
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Peterson, Shelley Stagg; Jang, Soon Young; Miguel, Jayson San; Styres, Sandra; Madsen, Audrey – McGill Journal of Education, 2018
Five Aboriginal Head Start early childhood educators from a northern Canadian community participated in interviews for the purpose of informing non-Indigenous teachers' classroom teaching. Their observations and experiences highlight the importance of learning from and on the land alongside family members, and of family stability and showing…
Descriptors: Preschool Teachers, Canada Natives, American Indians, Teacher Attitudes
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Hudson, Audrey – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
In this paper, I discuss one photograph from a youth who participated in a 12-week arts based educational program I facilitated for Indigenous Young Adults at the Native Youth Drop-In centre in Toronto, Canada. By being able to communicate through their artwork, the youth shifted away from thinking of themselves as victims, and exuded a sense of…
Descriptors: Photography, Victims, Art Education, Foreign Countries
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Gorlewski, Julie; Porfilio, Brad J. – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2012
Based upon the life histories of six Indigenous hip hop artists of the Beat Nation artist collective, this essay captures how Indigenous hip hop has the potential to revolutionize environmental education. Hip hop provides Indigenous youth an emancipatory space to raise their opposition to neocolonial controls of Indigenous territories that…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Environmental Education, Foreign Countries, Music
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Johnson, Daniel Morley – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
Since early colonial times, Indigenous peoples on Anowarakowa Kawennote--"Great Turtle Island" in Kanienkeha (the Mohawk language)--have been represented via the imaginations of the invading European settler-colonists. Not surprisingly, such typically distorted representations have long been a part of the popular press and news media in…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Mass Media Use, North Americans
British Columbia Teachers' Federation, 2012
Since the beginning of time, Aboriginal people have had a high regard for education. Euro-Canadian contact with Aboriginal peoples has and continues to have devastating effects. The encroachment on their traditional territory has affected the lands and resources forever. Generations of experience within the residential school system have greatly…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Residential Schools, American Indian Education
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Colpitts, George – Great Plains Quarterly, 2009
The author analyzes a buffalo hunt which occurred in 1869. That spring, many hundreds of Cree, Assiniboine, Stoney, and Metis hunters going to the Plains were joined by a contingent of Wesleyan Methodists and their Native affiliates from Fort Edmonton, Pigeon Lake, Lac Ste. Anne, Lac La Biche, and Whitefish Lake--all located on the most northern…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Religious Organizations, Role of Religion
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Nielsen, Thomas William – International Review of Education, 2010
This paper reports on findings from the Learning for Understanding through Culturally-Inclusive Imaginative Development project (LUCID). LUCID has been a 5-year (2004-2009) research and implementation endeavour and a partnership between Simon Fraser University (SFU) and three districts in British Columbia, Canada. Via emotionally engaging…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Foreign Countries, Educational Experience, Phenomenology
Glenn, Charles L. – Palgrave Macmillan, 2011
Tracing the history of Native American schooling in North America, this book emphasizes factors in society at large--and sometimes within indigenous communities--which led to Native American children being separate from the white majority. Charles Glenn examines the evolving assumptions about race and culture as applied to schooling, the reactions…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Maintenance, American Indians, Educational History
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Tupper, Jennifer A.; Cappello, Michael – Curriculum Inquiry, 2008
This article examines the importance of treaty education for students living in a province entirely ceded through treaty. Specifically, we ask and attempt to answer the questions "Why teach treaties?" and "What is the effect of teaching treaties?" We build on research that explores teachers' use of a treaty resource kit,…
Descriptors: Treaties, Foreign Countries, Learning Activities, Racial Relations
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Dickason, Olive Patricia – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 1982
France sought to assimilate Amerindians by racial intermixing as an instrument of empire. In doing so, France unwittingly prepared the way for a phenomenon which it did not want and would have disapproved of thoroughly: the development among the Metis of the Canadian Northwest of a sense of a separate identity, the spirit of the "New…
Descriptors: American Indian History, Canada Natives, Ethnic Relations, Social Integration
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Ray, Arthur J. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 1982
While social history has made great contributions to fur trade and native history, the article reflects upon the limitations of present approaches of recounting Canadian history. (ERB)
Descriptors: American Indian History, Canada Natives, Social Change, Social Integration
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