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Rogers, K. Kaye – ProQuest LLC, 2011
This study examined the impact of principals' data-driven decision-making practices on student achievement using the theoretical frame of Dervin's sense-making theory. This study is a quantitative cross-sectional research design where principals' perceptions about data were quantitatively captured at a single point in time. The participants for…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Program Effectiveness, American Indians, Decision Making
Jaramillo, Nathalia E.; McLaren, Peter; Lazaro, Fernando – Policy Futures in Education, 2011
Using the term "recuperation" from their experiences working alongside activists in the "occupied factories" of Argentina, the authors illustrate how "occupied spaces" were transformed into "recuperated" sites of pedagogical, cultural and artistic production. Focusing on the IMPA factory (Industrias…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, American Indian Culture, Cultural Centers, Foreign Countries
Roysircar, Gargi; Pignatiello, Vincent – Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development, 2011
A multicultural-ecological (M-Eco) method assesses multiple levels of a client's presentation, such as individual, micro-, meso-, exo-, macro-, and chronosystems. An M-Eco method is a culturally sensitive practice of Bronfenbrenner's (1995) ecological perspective that focuses on behavior's contextual and interactional nature and an individual's…
Descriptors: Indians, Immigrants, Females, Cultural Awareness
Sondag, K. Ann; Strike, Carrie – American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research: The Journal of the National Center, 2011
This study examined the epidemiology of HIV among AI/ANs in Montana. Barriers to HIV testing and motivations to test also were explored. Analysis of data revealed that there were no significant changes in regard to HIV/AIDS case rates, demographic characteristics, or risk behaviors of AI/ANs infected with HIV/AIDS since reporting began in 1985.…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), American Indians, Alaska Natives, Testing
Stelter, Rebecca L.; Halberstadt, Amy G. – Infant and Child Development, 2011
This study investigated how parental beliefs about children's emotions and parental stress relate to children's feelings of security in the parent-child relationship. Models predicting direct effects of parental beliefs and parental stress, and moderating effects of parental stress on the relationship between parental beliefs and children's…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Parent Attitudes, Beliefs, Psychological Patterns
Clemente, Angeles; Higgins, Michael James; Sughrua, William Michael – Language and Education, 2011
In his poem entitled "Privacy", Alberto, an inmate in the state prison of Oaxaca, Mexico, vividly evokes the conflictive dynamics of space and time within his living quarters. This is his way of dealing with the sadness, trauma, and mundanity of his incarceration. Alberto's poem has emerged from our ongoing ethnographic project based on…
Descriptors: Institutionalized Persons, Creative Writing, Correctional Institutions, Ethnography
Harper, Faith G. – Family Journal: Counseling and Therapy for Couples and Families, 2011
Statistics show that two thirds of American Indians and Alaska Natives (AIs/ANs) live outside of tribal areas, and 50% of those individuals who seek counseling services will not use tribal resources. There is a strong likelihood that counselors will have the opportunity to provide services to AI/AN clients. The review of the academic literature…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Counseling Services, American Indians, Alaska Natives
Hieb, Louis A. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
Images of kachinas and clowns are found throughout books, journals, and magazines that celebrate the arts of American Indian peoples, including the Hopi. As familiar as people are with these visual images, for the most part they are one-dimensional and suggest little of their meaningful contexts in Hopi thought and ritual. There are other more…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Ceremonies, Humor, Change
Kolodny, Annette – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
With its roots in ancient rhetoric and medieval liturgy, the term "trope" now refers to a figure of speech that organizes a set of complex ideas into a kind of linguistic shorthand. A trope is thus a phrase or image that conveys more than its literal meaning. In this article, two tropes are pertinent: the "pastoral" and the "fortunate fall." The…
Descriptors: American Indian History, Figurative Language, Cultural Background, Films
Rule, Audrey C., Ed.; Lindell, Lois A., Ed. – Online Submission, 2009
Hands-on projects such as creating a three-dimensional diorama are among the most memorable of positive elementary school experiences, yet they are generally uncommon because these complex projects are daunting to undertake. Therefore, it is important to prepare preservice teachers with the skills to lead children in creating these types of…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, Methods Courses, Handicrafts
Betts, J. David – Journal of American Indian Education, 2009
This study is about a community computing lab established by a U.S. Department of Commerce grant to bridge the Digital Divide in a rural Arizona American Indian community, a project called "Native Connection" (a pseudonym). This paper describes the process of integrating new literacies associated with a high-tech computer lab into the…
Descriptors: Participant Observation, American Indians, Computer Literacy, Computer Assisted Instruction
Henne, Richard B. – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2009
This article expands our understanding of how language-minoritized children's communicative competence interrelates with schooling. It features a verbal performance by a young Native American girl. A case is made for greater empirical specification of the real extent of children's non-school-sanctioned communicative competence. The case disrupts…
Descriptors: Language Skill Attrition, American Indians, Ideology, Communicative Competence (Languages)
Reifel, Nancy; Bayhylle, Ruth; Harada, Nancy; Villa, Valentine – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2009
Legislation during the past three decades has gradually drawn Indian Health Service (IHS)-funded clinics into the mainstream of the US medical care environment. The Indian Self-Determination and Education Reform Act of 1973 and its Indian Education Amendments of 1984 began a movement away from federal management of health services to local tribal…
Descriptors: Medical Services, Poverty, American Indians, Shared Resources and Services
Murphy, Sharon; Lemire, Lynne; Wisman, Mindi – American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research: The Journal of the National Center, 2009
This qualitative case study explores one American Indian (AI) woman's experience of intimate partner violence and the subsequent murder of her abusive partner. The lens of complex personhood (Gordon, 1997) has been applied as a method for understanding "Annie's" multiple identities of AI woman, victim of intimate partner violence, mother, and…
Descriptors: Family Violence, American Indians, Phenomenology, American Indian Culture
McKay, Sandra – English Teaching Forum, 2009
New Mexico, a state of brown plains and sand deserts, is nicknamed "The Land of Enchantment." One reason is that the very starkness of the land adds to its enchantment. Another reason is that the rich history of the state has resulted in a landscape filled with remnants of the Pueblo people, Spanish colonizers, and Mexican settlers.
Descriptors: American Indians, Tourism, Geography, United States History

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