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Shortridge, Barbara G. – Journal of Geography, 2005
How is the culture of Appalachia conveyed through its foods? Local experts in Appalachian counties were asked to create a hypothetical menu for a meal that was representative of their home region. Fried chicken and ham were the preferred main dishes and dessert selections focused on apple pie and peach or blackberry cobbler. Virtually everyone…
Descriptors: Food, Culture, Geographic Regions, Regional Characteristics
Corbett, Michael – Canadian Journal of Education, 2007
This analysis draws on interview data from a three-year study of educational decision making of youth living in a coastal community in Atlantic Canada. Students whose educational and mobility aspirations extend outside the known spaces of the community develop the ability to negotiate multiple social spaces in and out of school. The school- …
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Rural Environment, Rural Sociology, Rural Schools
Howard, Patrick – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2007
The impetus for this article was research I conducted while living with children on the coast of Newfoundland, Canada, during the culmination of decades of blatant disregard for the marine ecosystem. At the heart of the social and ecological devastation happening in Canada's Newfoundland and Labrador communities are matters of environmental…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ecology, Environmental Education, Indigenous Knowledge
Waldrip, Bruce G.; Timothy, Joe T.; Wilikai, Wilson – International Journal of Science Education, 2007
This paper draws on the personal experiences of three researchers: an "outsider" (or western-oriented) science teacher, a science teacher educator who has lived in Melanesian countries for almost a decade, and a national researcher who was born and educated in Melanesia. During a recent interpretative research study of the problematic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Researchers, Teacher Researchers, Culture Conflict
Grigorenko, Elena L.; Meier, Elisa; Lipka, Jerry; Mohatt, Gerald; Yanez, Evelyn; Sternberg, Robert J. – 2001
A growing body of empirical data suggests that there may be a true psychological distinction between academic and practical intelligence. If there is, then conventional ability tests used alone may reveal substantially less than we want to know about people's competence in everyday practical situations. Evidence to this effect is reviewed from…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Alaska Natives, Cultural Influences, Eskimos
Pino-Robles, Rodolfo – 2000
This paper proposes the development of Indigenous Studies as an international field, both in the sense of advancing the discipline internationally, wherever there are Indigenous peoples, and in the sense of incorporating international perspectives into curricula. In Canada, Indigenous Studies has been and is still treated as something to be done…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Indigenous Knowledge
Peer reviewedMurguia, Alejandro; Peterson, Rolf A.; Zea, Maria Cecilia – Health & Social Work, 2003
Central American health beliefs and practices are largely influenced by religious and indigenous worldviews. Study assesses the use of ethnomedical approaches and the illnesses for which these approaches are used among 76 Central Americans. Results indicate the importance of understanding and integrating cultural and spiritual influences on…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cultural Influences, Delivery Systems, Immigrants
Peer reviewedFeldman, Shelley; Welsh, Rick – Rural Sociology, 1995
Issues raised by feminist epistemic critiques of social science are used to examine local (farmer-based) knowledge of agriculture and its contribution to analyses of agricultural sustainability. Focuses on the on-farm gender division of labor as critical in constituting the family farm, and elaborates how different experiences of men and women…
Descriptors: Agricultural Production, Epistemology, Farmers, Feminism
Peer reviewedBelyea, Barbara – Great Plains Quarterly, 1997
As Lewis and Clark moved west across the North American continent, their contact with Native informants revealed spatial and topographic concepts at variance with their own "scientific" methods of cartography. The explorers' failure to understand and integrate Native patterns of geographical knowledge resulted in long detours where…
Descriptors: American Indians, Cartography, Cultural Differences, Culture Conflict
Peer reviewedJacobs, Don Trent – Paths of Learning: Options for Families & Communities, 2001
A critique of the current character education phenomenon notes the religious foundation of most of its proponents. Critical questions concerning the role of the Ten Commandments in character education examine whether the underlying worldview supports diversity. Ten moral recommendations from an Indigenous perspective articulate a worldview that…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Behavior Standards, Cultural Pluralism, Indigenous Knowledge
Peer reviewedMcGovern, Seana M. – Comparative Education Review, 2000
Reviews four books that explain modern schooling's irrelevance for many indigenous communities and that represent indigenous knowledge practices with respect: "What Is Indigenous Knowledge? Voices from the Academy"; "Escaping Education: Living as Learning within Grassroots Cultures"; "Intercultural Education and Literacy: An Ethnographic Study of…
Descriptors: Book Reviews, Colonialism, Culturally Relevant Education, Elementary Secondary Education
Nicholson, Rob – Natural History, 2000
Created in 1552 as a gift for Spain's king, the Badianus Manuscript is a repository of Aztec traditional medicinal knowledge and contains the earliest surviving illustrations of New World plants. At the College of Santa Cruz (Mexico City) for Aztec nobility, an Aztec healer who became the college physician compiled plant descriptions and medicinal…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, Cultural Exchange, Foreign Countries
Collins-Gearing, Brooke – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2006
Australian children's literature has a history of excluding Indigenous child readers and positioning non-Indigenous readers as the subject. Rather than portray such literature, particularly before the 1950s, as simply racist or stereotypical, I argue that it is important for teachers, of all students, to help readers understand how nationalist or…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Indigenous Populations, Misconceptions, Racial Attitudes
Christie, Michael – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2006
Indigenous academic researchers are involved in Indigenist, interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary research, all of which present problems and opportunities for Indigenous knowledge traditions. "Transdisciplinary" research is different from "interdisciplinary" research because it moves beyond the disciplinarity of the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Interdisciplinary Approach, Researchers
McKinley, Elizabeth – International Journal of Science Education, 2005
The international literature suggests the use of indigenous knowledge (IK) and traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) contexts in science education to provide motivation and self-esteem for indigenous students is widespread. However, the danger of alienating culture (as knowledge) from the language in which the worldview is embedded seems to have…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Education, Malayo Polynesian Languages, Indigenous Knowledge

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