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Chao, Xia; Waller, Rachael – Urban Education, 2021
This case study examines how three American Indian families' language and literacy practices influence their children's emergent bilingual development in a predominately White, urban community in a Northwestern U.S. city. The study explores the families' life stories and their expressions of Indigenous language use and cultural practices. The…
Descriptors: American Indians, Family Literacy, Bilingualism, Urban Areas
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Cross, Terry L.; Pewewardy, Cornel; Smith, Adrian T. – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2019
This chapter summarizes the complex history of colonization of the Indigenous peoples of what is now the United States from the perspective of leadership education. The authors review the dilemmas and challenges of bridging fundamental cultural differences regarding leadership education and concrete steps toward decolonizing leadership education.
Descriptors: Leadership Training, Foreign Policy, American Indians, Cultural Differences
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Benavides Jimenez, Fabián; Mora Acosta, Yenny Lisbeth – PROFILE: Issues in Teachers' Professional Development, 2019
This article provides an overview of the ideas that two groups of bilingual teachers from different contexts, one indigenous and the other Western, have about the concepts of education, bilingualism, and interculturality. Their opinions were gathered through focus groups, semi-structured interviews, and videos, and reviewed under light of what the…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Bilingual Teachers, American Indians, Western Civilization
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Hyejung Kim; Muhammet Furkan Karakaya; Mandy Skinner; Diana Baker – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2025
In recent years, the Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring Network has observed a shift in racial disparities in autism. To delineate the historical shift of racial disproportionality in US autism prevalence, our literature review examines three key topics: publication trends concerning racial disproportionality in autism, discernible…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Incidence, Racial Differences, Disproportionate Representation
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David M. Grant – College Composition and Communication, 2017
Examining the "chanupa," or ceremonial pipe, from a Lakota perspective reveals it as responding to a particular ontology and extends indigenous rhetorics to consider the ontological dimensions of communication. Distinctions between indigenous rhetorics and new materialist rhetorics bring greater attention to how groups and individuals…
Descriptors: American Indians, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, American Indian Culture
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Zachary S. Gold; Yasmina Bayoun; Nina Howe; Kristen A. Dunfield – Early Education and Development, 2024
Research Findings: There are sparse data on children's use of executive function (EF) and spatial skills in block play. However, there are important implications for studying EF and spatial skills with blocks across cultures, especially regarding best practices for supporting social-cognitive development in under-resourced populations and…
Descriptors: Toys, Cross Cultural Studies, Play, Preschool Children
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Novack, Miriam A.; Standley, Murielle; Bang, Megan; Washinawatok, Karen; Medin, Douglas; Waxman, Sandra – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Parent-child communication is a rich, multimodal process. Substantial research has documented the communicative strategies in certain (predominantly White) United States families, yet we know little about these communicative strategies in Native American families. The current study addresses that gap by documenting the verbal and nonverbal…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Interpersonal Communication, Nonverbal Communication, American Indians
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Jackson, Sarah E.; Degener, Rebekah May; Sivashankar, Nithya – Journal of Children's Literature, 2022
In this article, we argue that picturebooks about food production, consumption, and distribution can provide rich opportunities for early childhood educators to facilitate critical conversations about culture, power, social action, and justice with their students.
Descriptors: Food, Picture Books, Childrens Literature, Social Action
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Dueweke, Anne – Myers Education Press, 2022
At a time when many individuals and institutions are reexamining their histories to better understand their tangled roots of racism and oppression, "Reckoning: Kalamazoo College Uncovers Its Racial and Colonial Past" tells the story of how American ideas about colonialism and race shaped Kalamazoo College, a progressive liberal arts…
Descriptors: Racism, Colonialism, Colleges, Educational History
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Hanson, Kelly – LEARNing Landscapes, 2019
In 2016, the province of British Columbia introduced a redesigned K-6 curriculum. Undergirding this plan is the learning philosophy, the First Peoples Principles of Learning. This paper is written from the perspective of a settler teacher as she engages in self-study research to develop her understanding of the curricular plan. The author…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Curriculum, Preschool Curriculum, Canada Natives
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Amy E. Sprowles; Nicholas A. Woronchuk; Jessica Jones; Noah Angell; Shay Konradsdottir; Elyse Mckinney; Xena Pastor-Nuila; Marina Rose Storey – Science Education and Civic Engagement, 2024
The authors are a group of Western-trained biologists (seven students and one faculty member) from diverse cultural backgrounds, who spent a semester exploring how they might complement their epistemological approach to addressing real-world problems by including possibilities outside the Western-scientific methodology. Their study focused on how…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Science Education, Indigenous Knowledge, Ethics
Stevie Lee – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Currently, the available research on Native faculty experiences emphasizes the challenges and hardships of being an Indigenous faculty member. Native faculty members are often underrepresented and rarely appreciated for the cultural teachings and knowledge they contribute within settler-colonial institutions. Nonetheless, Native faculty continue…
Descriptors: College Faculty, American Indians, Indigenous Populations, Disproportionate Representation
Kazim, Paul S. – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Most of the training material that Assemblies of God educators use in Latin America was originally written in English. Almost without exception nationals or missionaries translated the approved theology texts from English. While everyone contextualizes, the gospel message will not ever be completely at home in the Yucatan until the pastors think…
Descriptors: American Indians, Christianity, Clergy, Foreign Countries
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Harper Benjamin Keenan – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2019
Children in the United States live in a land of many nations, with nearly 600 federally recognized Native American and Alaska Native sovereign tribal nations and hundreds more not recognized by the federal government. Although children often study U.S. colonial history in elementary school, many non-Indigenous children may grow up unaware of…
Descriptors: United States History, American Indians, Indigenous Knowledge, Elementary School Students
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Groen, Janet; Kawalilak, Colleen – Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education, 2019
Drawing on an autoethnographic approach, we explore the role of museums in contributing to a decolonizing discourse. Through a guided tour of the Alex Janvier exhibition at the Glenbow Museum, a review of additional artifacts associated with the exhibition, and autoethnographic texts, we have come to see the deep potential of public institutions…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Foreign Policy, Museums, Role
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