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Keri Bradford – ProQuest LLC, 2021
This study addressed Native American students' perceptions of their educational experiences, 142 years after the first federally-run, off-reservation Indian Boarding School opened, and their perceptions of how university staff, faculty, and administrators could better serve Native students. Qualitative interviews were conducted with five Native…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, Higher Education, American Indian Education, American Indian History
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Wilson, Marguerite Anne Fillion; Scarbrough, Burke – Critical Studies in Education, 2018
This article brings together ethnographies of two privileged educational settings in the United States--a private school in California's Central Valley following the progressivist Sudbury model, and an affluent New England boarding school's summer enrichment program. Each of these institutions serves as an alternative to and/or extension of…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Private Schools, Boarding Schools, Summer Programs
Goddard, Lise; Hahn, Josh – Independent School, 2012
This article examines two independent schools as case studies for educating for sustainability, and shares what they have learned, what works, and best of all, what can be replicated elsewhere. Midland School--rigorous, rustic, and full of heart--is a small college preparatory boarding school on almost 3,000 acres in the Santa Ynez Valley in…
Descriptors: Boarding Schools, Natural Resources, Case Studies, Private Schools
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Whalen, Kevin – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
In this article, the author talks about labored learning under the auspices of the "outing program" of Sherman Institute, an Indian boarding school in Riverside, California. The outing system functioned as a vital part of a larger federal Indian boarding school system that sought, in the words of historian Matthew Sakiestewa Gilbert, to…
Descriptors: Boarding Schools, American Indian Education, Vocational Education, Laborers
Williams, Tara – ProQuest LLC, 2012
This exploratory study took a post-colonialist lens to record, examine and document schooling experiences of California Indian people across several generations representing three Central Valley tribes: the Mono, the Tachi Yokuts of Santa Rosa Rancheria, and the Tule River Tribe. Past and present perceptions of Indian schooling were elicited…
Descriptors: Generational Differences, American Indian Students, Interviews, Tribes
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Ledesma, Rita – Journal of Ethnic & Cultural Diversity in Social Work, 2007
This article reports on the findings from two studies conducted in the Los Angeles urban American Indian/Alaska Native (AIAN) community. The research investigated the relationship between the American Indian and Alaska Native cultural values and the social problems that challenge the urban Native community in the greater Los Angeles and Orange…
Descriptors: Human Services, Social Problems, Urban American Indians, American Indians
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Hendrick, Irving G. – History of Education Quarterly, 1976
Describes and attempts to explain some of the Federally directed educational policies aimed at Indians in California from 1849-1934. Significant relationships were found between the California experience and the national pattern in the areas of boarding school administration, curriculum structure, and testing procedures. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indians, Boarding Schools, Educational Administration
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Gilbert, Matthew T. Sakiestewa – Journal of American Indian Education, 2005
Arizona, 71 Hopi pupils left their families and homes to attend Sherman Institute, an off-reservation Indian boarding school in Riverside, California. Accompanied by their Kikmongwi (Village Chief), Tawaquaptewa and other Hopi leaders, the Hopis embarked on an adventure that forever changed their lives. For the majority of Hopi students, the…
Descriptors: Federal Government, American Indian Languages, American Indian Education, Boarding Schools
Hendrick, Irving G. – 1974
The report investigated the educational policy of Federal and state governments toward American Indians in California from 1850 to 1934. In California the fate of official efforts and non-efforts at educating Indians can be divided into 3 distinct periods. The period between 1849 and 1870 was a time when virtually nothing was attempted. Between…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American History, American Indians, Boarding Schools
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Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, 2003
Contains articles on such topics as the progress of black student enrollment at highly ranked institutions; academic performance of black athletes at highly ranked universities; racism on official U.S. maps; sharply deteriorating black enrollments at U.S. medical schools; crime on the rise at many black college campuses; the annual black college…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Affirmative Action, Black Colleges, Black Students
Metcalf, Ann Rosenthal – 1972
An investigation of long term effects of boarding school education was conducted among Navajo women who had attended boarding school on the reservation during the 1950's. Subjects were 23 Navajo mothers and, for 17 mothers, their preschool children; all lived in the San Francisco Bay Area. A series of open-ended interviews obtained information on…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indians, Boarding Schools