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Robinson, Loretta; West, Karen; Daoust, Melissa; Sylliboy, Simon; Lafferty, Anita; Wiseman, Dawn; Lunney Borden, Lisa; Ghostkeeper, Elmer; Glanfield, Florence; Ribbonleg, Monica; Bernard, Kyla – ZDM: Mathematics Education, 2023
This paper is an examination of the way mathematics, and STEM, arises through stories of teaching and learning on, with, and alongside "Land." It emerges from research, undertaken in different Nations (Cree, Dene, Métis, Mi'kmaw, Naskapi, Canada), that considers what locally meaningful K-12 STEM teaching and learning might look like in…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, STEM Education, Indigenous Knowledge, Elementary Secondary Education
Leslie Obol – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2024
Through critical and creative reflection, I consider what it means to be a Treaty Person in so-called Canada from the perspective of a settler educator. I focus on winter count making, which is a traditional practice of the Lakota (Sioux), Blackfoot, Kiowa, and Mandan Nations of the Prairies where symbols are created and used to recall significant…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, American Indians, Canada Natives
Yoon-Ramirez, Injeong; Ramirez, Benjamin W. – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2021
In this article, we discuss contemporary art practices as avenues for disrupting settler colonial narratives; we explore how the practices developed and adopted by contemporary Native American and First Nations artists can challenge settler colonial feelings. Employing the concept of settler common sense, we attend to the affective experience of…
Descriptors: Art Activities, American Indians, Canada Natives, Alaska Natives
Marleine Gélineau; Constance Russell; Lisa Korteweg – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
"Invasive" species are generally viewed with contempt. Yet many Indigenous peoples have more nuanced approaches to newcomer species informed by kinship relations, and some ecologists suggest that ecosystems have always been dynamic and these species occasionally play beneficial roles in their new homes. A critical and decolonial…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Decolonization, Canada Natives, Land Settlement
Gavin Meyer Furrey – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
This paper advances a theoretical analysis of the similarities and differences between critical theories of education and Indigenous theories of education along three main themes: epistemological and ontological groundings, the means of education, and political projects. While both schools of theory critique neoliberal and neoconservative…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Critical Theory, Politics of Education, Educational Theories
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
Ng, Wendy; Ayayqwayaksheelth, J'net; Chu, Sarah – Journal of Museum Education, 2022
In this article, the tree is used as a metaphor for the birth, nourishment, growth, stress, pruning, resilience, and regeneration of decolonial work to indigenize museum education. At the center of this work is Indigenous peoples, perspectives, and ways of knowing and being. This principle has guided the work of the authors who assert that when…
Descriptors: Museums, American Indians, Figurative Language, Females
Carol A. Mullen – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
The topic of this academic review is settler slogans that mandate colonial school policy in North America. Also discussed is Indigenous futurity as a strategy for transforming education and countering the educational harm that comes from weaponized language. Beginning in 1887, the US federal government authorized colonial schooling, using the…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Politics of Education, Advertising, Mass Media
King, Jessie – Papers on Postsecondary Learning and Teaching, 2023
Academia has been dominated by European/settler ways of knowing while denying the existence and validity of Indigenous epistemologies, science, and philosophies. Post-secondary structures were not built to be inclusive spaces, they were built without Indigenous voices or considerations and often housed individuals and departments who have…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Indigenous Knowledge, Colonialism
Reynold Macpherson – Journal of Educational Leadership, Policy and Practice, 2024
This paper relates Indigenous Peoples' moral philosophies to modern Western ethical thinking that is evident in leading contemporary theories of educative leadership. It introduces Indigenous ethics in general and explains the philosophical research methodology used. It then reports Celtic, Maori, North American Indian and Canadian First Nations,…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Transformational Leadership, Indigenous Knowledge, Moral Values
Chew, Kari A. B.; Child, Sara; Dormer, Jackie; Little, Alexa; Sammons, Olivia; Souter, Heather – Canadian Modern Language Review, 2023
This article shares a participatory action research project about the use of technology, specifically online Indigenous language courses, to learn and teach Indigenous languages. The research collaborators are the NETOLNEW "one mind, one people" Partnership, 7000 Languages, and two Indigenous Partners who have created courses with 7000…
Descriptors: Participatory Research, Action Research, American Indian Languages, Language Maintenance
Johnson, Kay – International Journal for Talent Development and Creativity, 2022
In this article, I provide a critical reading of the now-removed statue of Sir John A. Macdonald in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada. I bring together my own experience visiting the statue with understandings from Indigenous scholarship and public pedagogy theorizing to think about commemorations as public pedagogies that are foremost…
Descriptors: Historic Sites, Sculpture, History, Canada Natives
Eppley, Karen; Stagg Peterson, Shelley; Wood, Jeffrey – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2022
This critical content analysis examines representations of rural life in a sample of 52 picture books by Indigenous and non-Indigenous authors and illustrators. While the United States and Canadian governments use quantitative measures to designate rurality, in this study rurality is conceptualized more broadly as an interaction between…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Rural Areas, Picture Books, Childrens Literature
John Terry Ward – Roeper Review, 2024
This article looks at how colonialism has contributed to the racialized history of Indigenous people by unethical diagnostic implementations of categories and classifications, while overlooking exceptionalities when assessing Indigenous people. By understanding how settler-colonial assessments and/or diagnostic tests have been developed and…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Indigenous Populations, Land Settlement, United States History
Choate, Peter W.; St-Denis, Natalie; MacLaurin, Bruce – Journal of Social Work Education, 2022
Canada, like other nations with colonizing histories and ongoing colonial practices marginalizing Indigenous peoples, is searching for pathways leading to reconciliation. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission called on the social work profession to engage in the decolonization of social work structures and processes, including how it educates…
Descriptors: Social Work, Counselor Training, Counselor Educators, Universities