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Soka, John Alex – ProQuest LLC, 2011
This quantitative research study identified perceptions regarding leadership styles of a sample of high school, middle school, and elementary school principals serving in South Dakota public and tribal/BIE (Bureau of Indian Education) schools in 2011. From 152 public school districts and 20 tribal/BIE schools, a sample of 148 school principals was…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Socioeconomic Status, Poverty, Statistical Analysis
Steen-Adams, Michelle M.; Langston, Nancy E.; Mladenoff, David J. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
The harvest of the Great Lakes primary forest stands (ca. 1860-1925) transformed the region's ecological, cultural, and political landscapes. Although logging affected both Indian and white communities, the Ojibwe experienced the lumber era in ways that differed from many of their white neighbors. When the 125,000-acre Bad River Reservation was…
Descriptors: Earth Science, Ecology, Tribes, Forestry
Haynes Writer, Jeanette – Action in Teacher Education, 2010
The reality of tribal nationhood and the dual citizenship that Native Americans carry in their tribal nations and the United States significantly expands the definition and parameters of citizen education. Citizenship education means including and understanding the historical and political contexts of all U.S. citizens--especially, those…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, American Indians, Tribes, Citizenship
Lex, Leo – Congressional Budget Office, 2009
In this report, part of an annual series that began in 1997, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) reviews its activities under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995. The report covers public laws enacted and legislation considered by the Congress in 2008 that would impose federal mandates on state, local, or tribal governments or on the…
Descriptors: Federal Government, Budgeting, Federal Legislation, Expenditures
Monroe, Barbara – College Composition and Communication, 2009
The indigenous rhetoric of the Plateau Indians continues to exert a discursive influence on student writing in reservation schools today. Plateau students score low on state-mandated tests and on college writing assignments, in large part because the pervasive personalization of Plateau rhetoric runs counter to the depersonalization of academic…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Rhetoric, Writing Instruction, American Indians
Marling, David – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Native American Nations have perpetually had the highest rates of poverty and unemployment and the lowest per capita income of any ethnic population in the United States. Additionally, American Indian students have the highest high school dropout rates and lowest academic performance rates as well as the lowest college admission and retention…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Paying for College, Poverty, Unemployment
New Mexico Public Education Department, 2017
In compliance with the Indian Education Act (NMSA1976 Section 22), the purpose of the Tribal Education Status Report (TESR) is to inform stakeholders of the New Mexico Public Education Department's (PED) current initiatives specific to American Indian students and their educational progress. This report examines both the current conditions and…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, American Indian Education, Educational Legislation, Public Education
Wilkins, David E.; Lightfoot, Sheryl – American Indian Quarterly, 2008
No comprehensive analysis of tribal constitutions has ever been conducted, so this project aims to begin filling this significant gap in American, constitutional, and comparative politics research. In this study, the authors examine only one small but significant element of Native constitutions: oaths of office for incoming tribal government…
Descriptors: Tribes, Word Order, Employment Practices, Public Officials
Todd, Jude – American Indian Quarterly, 2008
Scientists are not sure of how corn was created. There were two competing genetic theories about how corn came to be. One theory maintains that corn had been teased out of a wheatlike grass called teosinte (genus Zea), and the other contends that one now-extinct ancestor of corn had crossed with another grass, "Tripsacum," several millennia ago.…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Culture, Genetics, Theories
Luby, Edward M.; Nelson, Melissa K. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) has fundamentally changed the relationship between museums and tribal peoples. Since 1990, thousands of human remains and funerary objects and hundreds of sacred objects and objects of cultural patrimony have been repatriated to tribes. Human remains and funerary objects have been…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, Ceremonies, American Indians, Museums
Rushing, Stephanie Craig; Stephens, David – Journal of Primary Prevention, 2011
American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) youth are disproportionally burdened by many common adolescent health issues, including drug and alcohol use, injury and violence, sexually transmitted infections, and teen pregnancy. Media technologies, including the Internet, cell phones, and video games, offer new avenues for reaching adolescents on a…
Descriptors: Video Games, American Indians, Alaska Natives, Drinking
Salant, Priscilla; Laumatia, Laura – Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement, 2011
The Coeur d'Alene Reservation spans 345,000 acres of mountains and farmland in northern Idaho. Most people on the reservation live in the communities of Worley, Plummer, Tensed, and Desmet. Roughly 50 miles south of Plummer is the University of Idaho's main campus in Moscow. The university is Idaho's land-grant institution, with a statewide…
Descriptors: Community Leaders, Community Development, Strategic Planning, Land Use
Pearson, Sarah S. – American Youth Policy Forum, 2009
Grants awarded by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) Tribal Youth Program (TYP) support and enhance tribal efforts to prevent and control delinquency and improve the juvenile justice system for American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) youth ages 17 and under. TYPs operate in tribal communities, supporting tribal efforts…
Descriptors: Youth Programs, Delinquency, Delinquency Prevention, American Indians
Shore, Jay H.; Orton, Heather; Manson, Spero M. – American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research: The Journal of the National Center, 2009
Dreams hold particular relevance in mental health work with American Indians (AIs). Nightmares are a common sequelae of trauma and a frequent defining feature of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Despite mounting evidence of the prevalence of trauma and PTSD among AIs and the important cultural role of dreams, no work to date has directly…
Descriptors: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, American Indians, Sleep, Cultural Context
Reinhardt, Martin James; Perry Evenstad, Jan; Faircloth, Susan – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2012
Data from this preliminary study, the American Indian--Dads and Daughters Survey, shed light on how American Indian fathers think and feel about their relationships with their daughters. Respondents represent an array of tribal affiliations, age, occupations, socioeconomic status, and geographical/geopolitical locations, helping to ensure that…
Descriptors: Social Values, American Indians, Daughters, Fathers