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Young, Mary – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2003
The Anishinabe language is alive, and Anishinabe world view is embedded in it. It is important to continue speaking the language because not doing so contributes to language loss and the undermining of the Anishinabe world view. Dictionaries can help in preserving Native languages, but they must be written by Natives from a Native perspective. The…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Cultural Maintenance, Language Maintenance, Language Role
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Liu, James H.; Temara, Pou – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 1998
Interviews in two rural Maori villages in New Zealand examined elements of traditional Maori identity--sacredness, interconnectedness, language, and sense of place--and contrasted these elements with massive generational changes in economic circumstances. Although encouraging cultural and language maintenance, traditional Maori identity has not…
Descriptors: Cultural Maintenance, Culture Conflict, Economic Change, Foreign Countries
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Paulsen, Rhonda L. – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2003
Aboriginal literacy encompasses oral tradition, culture, language, identity, and world view in addition to the written word, and is a process of lifelong learning, much of which occurs beyond school walls. When defining Native literacy, one must move away from measuring Aboriginal students by Euro-Western definitions and move toward a balanced,…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Cultural Maintenance, Educational Needs, Hegemony
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Cohen, Bill – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2001
The spider's web is presented as a model for Indigenous education and community transformation, grounded in Okanagan philosophy. Children are at the center and benefit from the influence of extended family and community. The model's relevance for language revitalization, cultural maintenance, and educational planning and assessment is discussed.…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Community Role, Cultural Maintenance, Educational Philosophy
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Johnson, Carl Garth – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2001
Non-Native scholarly interpretations of The Three Bears--a traditional story of the Nlha7kapmx Nation--focus on mythology as simplistic science to explain the physical world. In contrast, a Nlha7kapmx interpretation illuminates connections of land to people. Such stories reinforce cultural identity and teach young people about the spiritual power…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Canada Natives, Cultural Context, Cultural Maintenance
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Weber-Pillwax, Cora – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2001
Examines the importance and centrality of orality, rather than literacy, in the shared lives of the Cree of northern Alberta. Discusses orality consciousness related to the practice of shared memories and personal and communal healing during the "dance of the ancestors" or "ghost dance." Includes a short history of the Cree…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, Canada Natives, Ceremonies
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George, Ningwakwe Priscilla – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2003
Aboriginal literacy programs in Canada are using literacy as a means of reclaiming Aboriginal languages and a positive cultural identity. The Rainbow/Holistic Approach to Aboriginal literacy uses seven ways of knowing, each corresponding to a color. The approach recognizes that spirit, heart, mind, and body equally contribute to a life of balance,…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Canada Natives, Cognitive Style, Cultural Maintenance
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Gamlin, Peter – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2003
Literacy is discussed in the broadest sense. From an Aboriginal perspective, literacy is about sustaining a world view and culture, resymbolizing and reinterpreting past experience while honoring traditional values, living these values, and visioning a future in which an Aboriginal way of being will continue to thrive. Meaningful Aboriginal…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Biculturalism, Canada Natives, Creativity
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Johnston, Bill; Johnson, Kimberly A. – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2002
Reviews the literature about preschool immersion education for Indigenous languages. Describes the two oldest and best known of such programs: Kohanga Reo ("language nests") in Aotearoa/New Zealand and Punana Leo in Hawaii. Looks at existing U.S. programs, particularly Arapaho preschools in Wyoming. Outlines major themes and issues in developing…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indian Education, American Indians, Community Involvement
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Yeoman, Elizabeth – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2000
The literature on language diversity, linguistic human rights, and language renewal is reviewed, and Web sites dedicated to Aboriginal languages are examined. The Internet provides a resource center where grammars, lexicons, fonts, and other resources can be developed; a means of learning languages; and a medium for communicating in Aboriginal…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Computer Mediated Communication, Cultural Maintenance, Distance Education
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Barnhardt, Carol – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 1999
Case study describes the efforts of Kuinerrarmiut Elitnaurviat, the K-12 school in Quinhagak, Alaska, to implement school reform initiatives that support the merging of school and community values and priorities. Despite nearly a century of outside acculturation efforts, the Yupik people of Quinhagak are attempting to integrate their language,…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, Case Studies, Community Control, Cultural Maintenance
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Antone, Eileen – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2003
More than just the development of reading and writing skills, Aboriginal literacy is a wholistic concept, with spiritual, physical, mental, and emotional aspects, involving relationships between self, community, nation, and creation. Models are presented for incorporating traditional Aboriginal knowledge and methodologies into Aboriginal learning…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, Canada Natives, Cultural Maintenance
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Kenny, Carolyn; Archibald, Jo-ann – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2000
A 4-week program in Vancouver (British Columbia) used traditional and academic formats to connect Aboriginal communities throughout British Columbia with each other and with Maori participants from New Zealand. A conference, a symposium and graduate courses covered the role of Aboriginal art, politics of transforming education, revitalization of…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, Canada Natives, Conferences
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Pihama, Leonie; Cram, Fiona; Walker, Sheila – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2002
Kaupapa Maori is a self-determination, anti-colonial education agenda that asserts the right of Maori to be Maori. Kaupapa Maori education initiatives grew out of Maori dissatisfaction with mainstream education. The key elements of Kaupapa Maori are self-determination, cultural aspiration, culturally preferred pedagogy, socioeconomic mediation,…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Cultural Maintenance, Culturally Relevant Education, Educational History
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Sioui, George; And Others – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 1995
Three Native Americans discuss Native American history and the quest for tribal sovereignty, their educational experiences, their views on the conference and the development of a First Nations graduate program, the importance of preserving and transmitting Native American culture and language, and the importance of Native Americans with advanced…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indian History, Cultural Maintenance
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