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Allery, V. P. – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2017
History at its best helps the present make sense of the past. History at its best tells the nation's story through the voices of all the people. These voices enlighten and provide wise counsel for the present, creating healthy and creative communities. History at its worst not only ignores the different voices, but eliminates them altogether. The…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Students, American Indian History, History Instruction
David M. Grant – College Composition and Communication, 2017
Examining the "chanupa," or ceremonial pipe, from a Lakota perspective reveals it as responding to a particular ontology and extends indigenous rhetorics to consider the ontological dimensions of communication. Distinctions between indigenous rhetorics and new materialist rhetorics bring greater attention to how groups and individuals…
Descriptors: American Indians, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, American Indian Culture
Cisneros, Nora Alba – Urban Education, 2022
This article begins with the fundamental premise that Indigenous adolescent girls are writers. Indigenous adolescent girls speak and write in multitudes of voices, yet their physical and literary presence is often unaccounted in educational research and writing. Guided by the theoretical insights of Chicana Feminist Epistemology and Tribal…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Females, Writing (Composition), Urban Culture
Metzger, Janet Jeannine – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This multiple case study focused on three Native American women superintendents' self-efficacy beliefs and the impact of the Indigenous culture on their decision making as they led their school district through the COVID-19 pandemic. Albert Bandura's self-efficacy theory served as the underpinning theory of this study. The qualitative research…
Descriptors: Superintendents, Women Administrators, American Indians, Self Efficacy
New Mexico Public Education Department, 2021
The 2021 Tribal Education Status Report presents information and data related to students, teachers, funding, and other indicators regarding American Indian students attending New Mexico's public school districts for the 2020-2021 academic year. This report was prepared by the New Mexico Public Education Department (NM PED) and the PED's Indian…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Students, Tribes, Elementary Secondary Education
Grandmother Cedar as Educator: Teacher Learning through Native Knowledges and Sovereignty Curriculum
Jenni Conrad; Dawn Hardison-Stevens – American Educational Research Journal, 2024
As Indigenous-led education mandates proliferate globally, understanding how educators teach Indigenous perspectives and sovereignty remains urgent. Learning and integrating such knowledge proves difficult for non-Native teachers, given their lengthy participation in settler colonial schooling and society. What does learning to implement Native…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Indigenous Knowledge, Tribal Sovereignty, Decolonization
Lourdes de León; Rosnátaly Avelino Sierra – First Language, 2024
Research on the acquisition of Mayan languages has shown child-directed communication (CDC) to be low in frequency. Nevertheless, long-term linguistic-anthropological research with the Tsotsil Mayan in Southern Mexico has documented episodes in family life when children engage in interactional routines or interactional formats (IFs) with their…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Caregiver Child Relationship, Classification, Family Relationship
Luis Urrieta Jr. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2024
The American Educational Studies Association (AESA) was established in 1968 in a context of both local and global social justice movements. The AESA's mission and ongoing commitment to the analysis of education and society with underlying liberal activist aims has been ongoing since. Although AESA and its membership have been critiqued and…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Educational Change, Foundations of Education, Social Influences
Bridget V. Franco – Hispania, 2024
Working at the intersections of Latin American film studies, Afro-Latin American studies, digital humanities (DH), and decolonial pedagogical praxes, this article aims to engage with educators interested in teaching about Afro-descendant representation, antiracist audiovisual productions, the legacy of the African diaspora in Latin America, and…
Descriptors: Films, Latin Americans, Blacks, Decolonization
Vrinda Acharya; Ambigai Rajendran; Nandan Prabhu; Aneesha Acharya K – Cogent Education, 2024
This study elucidates how doctoral students perceive the challenges and impediments of their doctoral programs. In this study, the demands of doctoral programs are characterized as challenges that stimulate students' potential and hindrances that threaten their well-being. Thirty-five full-time PhD students at various stages of their programme…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Barriers, Student Responsibility, Student Attitudes
Rosemary McBride – Career and Technical Education Research, 2024
This Delphi study identified postsecondary career and technical education (CTE) needs and differences by race in rural areas. Seventeen rural community experts in education, business, and community leadership participated across three rounds. Round 1 involved interviews to compile perspectives about future careers and training. Round 2 used…
Descriptors: Rural Areas, Vocational Education, Educational Needs, Differences
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
Riya Sara Jacob; Sunila John; Monica L. Bellon-Harn; Vinaya Manchaiah – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
The importance of parent-child shared book reading (SBR) is well established. However, there is a limited understanding of parental interaction patterns during SBR among preschool children in the Indian context. Using a cross-sectional observational study design, mothers' verbal and nonverbal behavior during SBR was analyzed in 26 Kannada-speaking…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Literacy, Mothers, Parent Child Relationship
Brianne Dotson; Bejanae Kareem – Region 13 Comprehensive Center, 2024
Almost 90 percent of social studies curriculum standards do not mention American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) history after 1900, and 27 states do not mention AI/AN peoples in their K-12 curricula at all. AI/AN content and contributions are even less prevalent in English language arts standards, with most states not yet meaningfully…
Descriptors: Social Studies, American Indian History, Alaska Natives, English Instruction

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