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Utah State Board of Education, 2017
The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) requires the State to calculate a four-year cohort rate. Utah implemented a federally defined cohort graduation rate in 2008. The graduation rate for the 2017 cohort includes all students who started ninth grade in the 2013-14 school year, plus students who transferred into the Utah public education system…
Descriptors: Graduation Rate, High School Graduates, Dropout Rate, Student Characteristics
Scholastic Inc., 2019
The "Kids & Family Reading Report" is a national survey sharing the views of both kids and parents on reading books for fun and the influences that impact kids' reading frequency and attitudes toward reading. "The Rise of Read-Aloud" is one installment the Scholastic "Kids & Family Reading Report™: 7th…
Descriptors: Reading Habits, Oral Reading, Emergent Literacy, Parent Role
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Sorisio, Carolyn – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2011
In an age when American newspapers reported on US-Indian Relations in a sporadic and biased manner, Northern Paiute educator, translator, author, and activist Sarah Winnemucca produced sustained, specific, and often sympathetic coverage. She was well aware of newspapers' power, as demonstrated by the more than four hundred newspaper items by or…
Descriptors: American Indians, News Reporting, Newspapers, Careers
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Morris, Kate – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
In this article the author is concerned with the intersection of two congruent phenomena: (1) an increasing number of references to borders in contemporary Native American art; and (2) an increasing occurrence of border-rights conflicts between Native nations and the governments of the United States and Canada. Focusing on the period roughly 1990…
Descriptors: American Indians, Foreign Countries, Art, Conflict
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Pearlstone, Zena – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
This essay is a short history of imitation "tithu," dolls representing "katsinam," the Hopi supernaturals. It is a study of "authenticity" in the marketplace and its perceived relation to "magic," "spirituality," and "antiquity," as the article follows early changes at Hopi through the…
Descriptors: Imitation, Enrollment, American Indian Culture, Handicrafts
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Kopacz, Maria A.; Lawton, Bessie Lee – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
Online outlets for user-generated content (UGC) like YouTube have created environments for alternative depictions of marginalized groups, as UGC can be contributed by anyone with basic technology access. Preliminary findings on UGC relating to Native Americans confirm some favorable departures from the distortions prevalent in the old media. The…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Race, Cues, American Indians
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McCarthy, Theresa – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
Among the Haudenosaunee, the clan system is an ancient tradition of matrilineal descent that has maintained the social, political, economic, and spiritual cohesion of the people for centuries. Following the American Revolution and the relocation of large numbers of Haudenosaunee people from America's traditional homelands in what is now New York…
Descriptors: Citizenship, American Indian Languages, Foreign Countries, Leadership
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Beyer, Kalani – American Educational History Journal, 2014
This chapter is a detailed investigation of education for Native Hawaiians during the 19th century. However, adhering to Ronald Takaki's assertion (2000) that it is important to demonstrate that America's racial policies involved common practices across culturally diverse groups, this paper incorporates prior studies on the education of African…
Descriptors: Hawaiians, American Indian Education, African American Education, United States History
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Thien, Lei Mee; Razak, Nordin Abd – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2014
Commitment is a complex attitude that is potentially influenced by the nature of the groups and is contingent on the context in which an individual functions. Thus, different sociocultural environments will prescribe different imperatives for individuals' or groups' attitudes toward their work, particularly teachers' commitment in a multi-ethnic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Questionnaires, Ethnic Groups, Elementary School Teachers
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Deutsch, Rachel; Woolner, Leah; Byington, Carol-Lynne – McGill Journal of Education, 2014
Storytelling is a way of dealing with trauma. For many of those who have experienced trauma, sharing one's own experiences, in the form of a personal narrative, can help to develop new meaning on past events. "Now I See It" was a storytelling project that resulted in a collection of photographs taken by members of the urban Aboriginal…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Females, Trauma, Coping
Haynes, Mariana – Alliance for Excellent Education, 2014
The majority of students are leaving high school without the reading and writing skills needed to succeed in college and a career. Many of the more than 700,000 students who leave U.S. high schools each year without a diploma have low literacy skills. In America today, one in five students fails to graduate from high school on time. The…
Descriptors: Literacy, Reading Skills, High School Students, Reading Achievement
Mosholder, Richard S.; Waite, Bryan; Larsen, Carolee A.; Goslin, Christopher – Multicultural Education, 2016
This is the third report of a longitudinal project to improve recruiting and retention of Native American students at a large open-enrollment teaching university in the intermountain West where such students are greatly underrepresented. In the first study (Mosholder, et. al, 2013a), grounded theory was employed to create and evaluate a survey…
Descriptors: Student Recruitment, American Indian Students, College Students, Academic Persistence
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Kirkness, Verna J.; Barnhardt, Ray – Journal of College and University Student Housing, 2016
American Indian/First Nations/Native People have been historically under-represented in the ranks of college and university graduates in Canada and the United States. From an institutional perspective, the problem has been typically defined in terms of low achievement, high attrition, poor retention, weak persistence, etc., thus placing the onus…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Canada Natives, Access to Education, Postsecondary Education
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Iyengar, Kalpana Mukunda; Smith, Howard L. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2016
Many children from diverse cultures experience disconnectedness between their home and school. As they attempt to reconcile the conflicts among their multiple worlds, they must negotiate their situatedness in a variety of contexts, i.e., home community versus school, and construct a multifaceted identity. Absent support from school, Asian Indian…
Descriptors: Indians, Student Diversity, Cultural Maintenance, Creative Writing
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Prescott, Alexandra S.; Luippold-Roge, Genevieve P.; Gurman, Tilly A. – Health Education Journal, 2016
Objective: Maya women in Guatemala are disproportionately affected by poverty and negative reproductive health outcomes. Although social networks are valued in many Indigenous cultures, few studies have explored whether health education programmes can leverage these networks to improve reproductive health and economic wellbeing. Design: This…
Descriptors: Social Networks, American Indians, Females, Semi Structured Interviews
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