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Aylward, M. Lynn – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2009
This article explores the experiences of 8 Inuit curriculum authors in the Nunavut Territory of Canada during the creation of "Inuuqatigiit: The Curriculum From the Inuit Perspective". The "Inuuqatigiit" authors' story is examined in terms of the group coming together, their work with elders, the educational community's…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Eskimos, Canada Natives, Curriculum Development
Haggarty, John M.; Cernovsky, Zack; Bedard, Michel; Merskey, Harold – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 2008
We investigated the association of suicidal ideation and behavior with depression, anxiety, and alcohol abuse in a Canadian Arctic Inuit community. Inuit (N = 111) from a random sample of households completed assessments of anxiety and depression, alcohol abuse, and suicidality. High rates of suicidal ideation within the past week (43.6%), and…
Descriptors: Family (Sociological Unit), Eskimos, Alcohol Abuse, Suicide
Ball, Jessica – Canadian Modern Language Review, 2009
This article offers an original review of research and reports about young Indigenous children's language development needs and approaches to meeting them. The review addresses not only children's acquisition of an Indigenous language but also their acquisition of other languages (e.g., English and French), because their progress in one linguistic…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Community Development, Residential Schools, Academic Failure
Fredua-Kwarteng, Eric – Leadership and Policy in Schools, 2008
This paper uses Nunavut's compulsory schooling policy as a case study to discuss the role that cultural difference plays in policy development and implementation. The central argument of the paper is that the implementation and sustainability of the compulsory schooling policy would be fraught with enormous problems, given its colonialist,…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Community Schools, Eskimos, Cultural Differences
Jorgensen, J. Normann – International Journal of Multilingualism, 2008
Graffiti constitutes a medium through which the youth express opposition to authorities, as well as desires, dreams, and hopes. Graffiti shows many of the linguistic characteristics of youth language, including playfulness and, first and foremost, polylingual languaging. Graffiti in almost every city, at least in Europe, uses English and one or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, North Americans, Urban Areas, Power Structure

Duhaime, Gerard; Searles, Edmund; Usher, Peter J.; Myers, Heather; Frechette, Pierre – Social Indicators Research, 2004
Social cohesion has emerged as a powerful hybrid concept used by academics and policy analysts. Academics use the concept to underline the social and economic failings of modernity, linking it to the decline of communal values and civic participation. Policy analysts use it to highlight the social and economic inequities caused by globalization.…
Descriptors: Globalization, Social Indicators, Eskimo Aleut Languages, Social Capital
Prosek, Scott – English Journal, 2007
After two years of teaching English, history, and wilderness survival in the Inupiaq Eskimo village of Wales, Alaska, the author moved in Brazil to teach English and Theory of Knowledge in the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme. His four years of experience at the International School of Curitiba have confirmed his belief that…
Descriptors: Advanced Placement Programs, Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction

Koo, John H. – Russian Language Journal, 1980
Alaska, with its history of Russian colonization, has a large stock of Russian loanwords. The majority of the loanwords discussed are for cultural and concrete items and are substances, emerging as noun words, to which paragogic endings are agglutinated. (NCR)
Descriptors: Eskimo Aleut Languages, Linguistic Borrowing, Morphemes, Morphology (Languages)
Allen, Shanley – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2007
Inuktitut, the Eskimo language spoken in Eastern Canada, is one of the few Canadian indigenous languages with a strong chance of long-term survival because over 90% of Inuit children still learn Inuktitut from birth. In this paper I review existing literature on bilingual Inuit children to explore the prospects for the survival of Inuktitut given…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, Eskimos, Foreign Countries, Eskimo Aleut Languages
Webster, Joan Parker; Yanez, Evelyn – Journal of American Indian Education, 2007
This article describes an ethnographic study of the process of collecting, transcribing, translating, retelling, and adapting of a traditional Yup'ik story for a children's bilingual picture book, which is part of a culturally based math curriculum project, Math in a Cultural Context (MCC). The article opens with an overview of MCC and the role…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Picture Books, Alaska Natives, Ethnography
Woodbury, Anthony C. – 1982
Yupik language has two devices to indicate switch reference. The rules generally given for them are not entirely correct, and counterexamples to the ideal have been found previously. A subset of those counterexamples in Central Yupik Eskimo support the claim that there are two systems, partially overlapping and partially unique, that organize…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Eskimo Aleut Languages, Form Classes (Languages), Rhetoric
Charles, Walkie – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2005
Orchestrating an Indigenous language program for Indigenous peoples within any academic environment is no easy task. In most cases, Indigenous languages are taught by a recognized community expert, in the community; teaching that same language in a university environment is much more challenging. This article responds to Mindy J. Morgan's…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Language Maintenance, Higher Education, Eskimo Aleut Languages
Silook, Roger, Comp.; And Others – 1983
The dictionary is designed for learners of St. Lawrence Island (Alaska) Yupik, an Eskimo dialect. An introductory section gives an overview of the Yupik alphabet and phonology. Alphabetical word listings in St. Lawrence Island Yupik follow, with definitions in both Yupik and English. A sample sentence in Yupik using the entry word is followed by…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, Alphabets, Eskimo Aleut Languages, Phonology
Love, Mary – 1980
This report describes the procedures involved in the author's project to produce a bibliography of materials written in and about Inuktitut (the language of the Inuit Eskimo) which are held in the Metropolitan Toronto Library. The author's task orientation and methodology are detailed. (FM)
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Bibliographies, Books, Eskimo Aleut Languages

Corbett, Greville G.; Mithun, Marianne – Journal of Linguistics, 1996
This article discusses how constructing a typology of number systems is complicated by the existence of associative forms and why this problem arises. Data from Central Pomo and Central Alaskan Yupik demonstrate how this problem can be resolved. (18 references) (Author/CK)
Descriptors: Eskimo Aleut Languages, Language Typology, Nouns, Number Systems