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Eppley, Karen; Wood, Jeffrey; Stagg-Peterson, Shelley – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2024
Sixty percent of Indigenous people in Canada live rurally and on reserve but are largely absent among young adult and middle-grade fiction. This critical content analysis examines representations of the land and rural places and Indigenous identities in Canadian award-winning fiction written by Indigenous authors for young adult and middle-grade…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Rural Areas, Self Concept, American Indians
Skinner, Nadine Ann; Bromley, Patricia – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2023
Formal schooling in the U.S. has a long and violent history towards Indigenous peoples, today morphing into exclusion and erasure. Using a novel longitudinal dataset of U.S. textbooks (n = 193) from California and Texas, published from 1850 to 2019, we seek to shine light on the issue through a comprehensive analysis of depictions of Indigenous…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Textbook Content, History Instruction, United States History
Chow-Garcia, Nizhoni; Lee, Naomi; Svihla, Vanessa; Sohn, Claira; Willie, Scott; Holsti, Maija; Wandinger-Ness, Angela – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2022
Native Americans are the least represented population in science fields. In recent years, undergraduate and graduate level summer research programs that aimed to increase the number of Native Americans in science have made some progress. As new programs are designed, key characteristics that address science self-efficacy and science identity and…
Descriptors: Self Concept, American Indians, American Indian Culture, Science Education
Michelle Childress – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Native American students have consistently scored less than their white peers on high school academic achievement tests, have the lowest high school graduation rates, and have the lowest college enrollment rates. Research has evidenced challenges and struggles Native American children are faced with that negatively effects their success in the…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Public Schools, Tribally Controlled Education, American Indians
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
Kinch, Rosemary A.; Bobilya, Andrew J.; Daniel, Brad; Duncan, Sara – Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education, and Leadership, 2022
Indigenous storytelling is a transaction between narrators and audiences that can be expressed through Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK). TEK narratives, such as those of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI), can demonstrate ecological literacy by empowering audiences to co-create their engagement with the local environment of that…
Descriptors: American Indians, Story Telling, Indigenous Knowledge, Audience Awareness
La Vaglio, Michael – History Teacher, 2022
This article offers a case study on the history of the tattoo in the United States and the rise of American imperialism at the turn of the twentieth century. It models how high school history teachers can use the tattoo to teach about the rise of American imperialism. It also illustrates the author's primary argument: American imperialism fueled…
Descriptors: Art, Human Body, History Instruction, Foreign Policy
Neutuch, Eric – Journal of College Admission, 2018
In the 1960s, the Native American "self-determination" movement crusaded for increased Native sovereignty. The first tribally controlled college, Navajo Community College (later renamed Diné College), was founded in 1968 by the Navajo Nation in rural northeast Arizona, with a mission to sustain traditional Diné culture and to provide…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Education, Tribally Controlled Education, Postsecondary Education
Sarah B. Shear; Daniel G. Krutka – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2019
In this conceptual piece, we situate settler colonial theory and qualitative inquiry in a discussion about the research(ing) of social studies education. The context for this article includes our visit and conversations with 9th grade Oklahoma history teachers and their teaching and curriculum within Indigneous contexts. Although not focused as an…
Descriptors: Grade 9, History Instruction, High School Teachers, American Indians
Lessard, Sean; Caine, Vera; Clandinin, D. Jean – Irish Educational Studies, 2018
Framed by a question around vulnerability in narrative inquiries, we show the multiple ways that vulnerability is evident in narrative inquiry. We take up the concerns around vulnerability to show how, as narrative inquirers, we are searching to find ways to think with vulnerability and with what others have called neglected narratives. Drawing on…
Descriptors: American Indians, Qualitative Research, Ethics, Personal Narratives
Cisneros, Nora Alba – Urban Education, 2022
This article begins with the fundamental premise that Indigenous adolescent girls are writers. Indigenous adolescent girls speak and write in multitudes of voices, yet their physical and literary presence is often unaccounted in educational research and writing. Guided by the theoretical insights of Chicana Feminist Epistemology and Tribal…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Females, Writing (Composition), Urban Culture
Grandmother Cedar as Educator: Teacher Learning through Native Knowledges and Sovereignty Curriculum
Jenni Conrad; Dawn Hardison-Stevens – American Educational Research Journal, 2024
As Indigenous-led education mandates proliferate globally, understanding how educators teach Indigenous perspectives and sovereignty remains urgent. Learning and integrating such knowledge proves difficult for non-Native teachers, given their lengthy participation in settler colonial schooling and society. What does learning to implement Native…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Indigenous Knowledge, Tribal Sovereignty, Decolonization
Dykzeul, Theodore – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Current 11th grade U.S. History textbooks are Eurocentric and tell a biased portrayal of the country's history. This study analyzed the four most frequently used history textbooks in the most 25 populated school districts across the State of California using a mixed-method design, to show the degree to which they are Eurocentric. The four…
Descriptors: United States History, History Instruction, Textbook Evaluation, Grade 11
Peterson, Malory; Rink, Elizabeth; Schure, Mark; Mikkelsen, Kristina; Longtree, Hailey; FireMoon, Paula; Johnson, Olivia – American Journal of Sexuality Education, 2022
American Indian youth experience teen birth and school dropout at higher rates than other racial and ethnic groups in the United States. Early childbearing is associated with adverse health and socioeconomic outcomes, including attenuated education. However, kinship childrearing norms among Northern Plains tribes can support positive experiences…
Descriptors: American Indians, Reservation American Indians, Dropout Rate, Racial Differences
Sigrid Roman – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2025
Utilising data from 10 semi-structured interviews (n = 5), this article explores the diplomatic challenges and concerns Canadian secondary teachers faced when teaching about political violence and the strategies they employed while navigating these. Drawing insight from the notion of 'everyday diplomacy', the article frames teaching as a kind of…
Descriptors: Secondary School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Violence, Self Efficacy