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Abeyta, Joseph; Gachupin, Raymond; Gulibert, Felisa; Lovato, Ron; Andriamanana, Rijasoa; Merchant, Betty – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2020
The authors who contributed the interviews that follow did so with the understanding that their individual interviews, when considered collectively, could help readers gain a preliminary understanding of some of the fundamental values associated with indigenous leadership. Consistent with this intent, readers are urged to read all five interviews…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Leadership Qualities, Leadership Responsibility
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Glanfield, Florence; Nicol, Cynthia; Thom, Jennifer S. – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2022
How might mathematics educators recognize discourses as resonating harmonies in their practices as researchers? In this paper we share individual experiential narratives guided by Ojibway author Richard Wagamese's Medicine Wheel teachings in the four directions of East (humility), South (trust), West (introspection), and North (wisdom). As we…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Teachers, Teacher Researchers, Personal Narratives
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Petrone, Robert – Literacy Research: Theory, Method, and Practice, 2020
This interview highlights and extends Dr. Barbara Rogoff's keynote address at the 2019 annual convention. Specifically, in the interview, Dr. Rogoff discusses her framework for learning, Learning by Observing and Pitching In, as well as other aspects of learning, including notions of childhood, age-based social ordering, and conflict as an aspect…
Descriptors: Interviews, Conferences (Gatherings), Learning Processes, Age Differences
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Smagorinsky, Peter – Journal of Literacy Research, 2018
This article emphasizes the importance of understanding local contexts to provide appropriate education for teachers about literacy instruction. The author reviews general problems that follow from extrapolating from unrepresentative research samples and the errors and deficit conceptions that follow from assuming that all cognition takes place…
Descriptors: Literacy Education, Local Issues, Books, Seminars
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Rinehart, Melissa – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
The World's Columbian Exposition of 1893, in celebration of the quadricentennial anniversary of Columbus's landing in the Americas, spread over six hundred acres of reclaimed marsh lands in Chicago's South Side. Fourteen great buildings and two hundred additional buildings stood on the fairgrounds, and if tourists had visited every exhibit, they…
Descriptors: American Indians, Work Environment, Exhibits, American Indian History
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Vernon, Irene S. – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
Scholars Kali Tal and Cathy Caruth express the importance of trauma literature as "the need to tell and retell the story of the traumatic experience, to make it "real" both to the victim and to the community," and to tell "a reality or truth that is not otherwise available." In "Solar Storms" Linda Hogan vividly recounts the consequences of…
Descriptors: Trauma, Violence, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Females
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Roemer, Kenneth M. – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2012
In this essay, the author aims to further complicate the blurrings of Native poetry and autobiography and to make a plea. His general "complicating" genre claim is that an overlooked but absolutely essential form of Native identity expression--that is both preliterate and contemporary--is the traditional song, especially songs that from a…
Descriptors: Singing, American Indians, Autobiographies, Poetry
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Sarris, Greg – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this article, the author aims to answer three questions that Ken Lincoln asked in the introduction to his book. Where have Indians come? What have they learned? And what lies ahead? The author argues that many Indian tribes have power now with their business opportunities. Things are changing in many ways for them. They can say what they want…
Descriptors: American Indians, Tribes, American Indian Studies, American Indian History
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Deloria, Philip J. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
This commentary reflects on the articles included in this special issue of "American Indian Culture and Research Journal" that develop the theme of "American Indian languages in unexpected places" inspired by "Indians in Unexpected Places." The articles develop two related concerns: first, American Indian linguistic practices have been…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Language Maintenance, American Indians, American Indian Languages
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Million, Dian – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
American Indian studies claimed a space to interrogate Western disciplinary epistemologies utilizing Indigenous ways of "knowing". This epistemological struggle has, not surprisingly, been that: a struggle. As the author writes in 2010, people understand that their continuing desire to bring Indigenous community-based ways of knowing into dialogue…
Descriptors: Sleep, Academic Discourse, American Indian Studies, American Indians
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Logan, Tricia; Murphy, Karen – Comparative Education, 2017
This commentary closes this special issue with the reflections from two individuals who, like many in these fields, cross the boundaries between scholar, activist and practitioner in their work with young people, teachers and wider society. They bring their experiences working with difficult pasts in the service of better futures to the…
Descriptors: Justice, Educational Change, Communities of Practice, Administrator Attitudes
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Lowan-Trudeau, Gregory – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2017
This article is a response to Kassam, Avery, and Ruelle's insights as presented in this forum on rural science education. Topics considered include troubling the urban/rural divide in the context of Indigenous knowledge and expanding to include the common Canadian notion of the "remote," a designation rooted in our national colonial…
Descriptors: Activism, Rural Areas, Urban Areas, American Indians
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Barnes, Jim – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this article, the author recounts how he has become a writer and shares his experience in discovering who he is and what he does. The author didn't know who he was really until Ken Lincoln told him many moons ago in one of the seminal books of criticism of time. "Native American Renaissance" (1985) did much to pave the road that had been little…
Descriptors: American Indians, Authors, Literary Genres, Personal Narratives
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Treuer, David – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this paper, the author begins by saying how privileged he feels to be included in the celebration of the American Indian Culture and Research Journal (AICRJ) and to toast forty years of American Indian studies at UCLA. He looks back over the field of Native American literature and criticism, then peeks at the present, and last, makes some…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indian Studies, American Indian Culture, American Indians
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Warrior, Robert – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this paper, the author talks about some of the issues of the beginnings of Native and Indigenous studies and suggests that one looks more precisely at what people mean when they talk about those beginnings. The author is not a big fan of Native people emerging vaguely from the mists of time, but he is always tracing a history of Native studies…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, American Indians, American Indian History, Futures (of Society)
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