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Hope Allchin; Frank Fernandez – New Directions for Community Colleges, 2024
For students at tribal colleges, online courses provide access to college coursework, particularly for non-traditional students and students who live in rural communities. In addition, online courses provide unique opportunities for Indigenous students to connect with their tribal communities and to participate in cultural revitalization and…
Descriptors: Minority Serving Institutions, Tribally Controlled Education, Community Colleges, Online Courses
Carrie F. Whitlow – Rural Educator, 2024
The Cheyenne and Arapaho Department of Education (CADOE) functions as a tribal education department (TED) in western rural Oklahoma, situated within a tribal government that has a total membership of 13,212; 3,160 of whom are ages 3-18 years. CADOE has supported and advocated for equal opportunity and access for Cheyenne and Arapaho families and…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indians, Tribally Controlled Education, Tribal Sovereignty
Kelsey Dayle John – Qualitative Research Journal, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to outline the contributions of Smiths legacy in Indigenous methodologies and to show how her interventions encourage and facilitate meaningful research relationships with Indigenous communities. It is also a practical guide for future Indigenous researchers who aim to work with their communities.…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Indigenous Populations, Researchers, Community Involvement
Maura Sullivan – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Indigenous people of the world fight to maintain our lifeways, culture, and more specifically our languages. Speakers have endured waves of violence and persecution and in the face of that still fought to preserve and bring back languages. Language loss has been observed by communities and linguists and each figures out ways to document and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Cultural Maintenance, Language Maintenance, Language Minorities
Miigis B. Gonzalez; Alexandra Ziibiins Johnson; Lisa Awan Martin; Naawakwe; Jillian Fish; Lalaine Sevillano; Melissa L. Walls; Lee Obizaan Staples – Qualitative Research Journal, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this work is to honor the wisdoms of Anishinaabe Elders, community and culture by interweaving these teachings with my own (first author) Anishinaabe experiences and a research project. Ceremonies are an important health practice for Anishinaabe people. This project aimed to gain a clearer conceptualization of the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, American Indians, Puberty, Ceremonies
Tasha Hauff; Nacole Walker; Elliot Bannister – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2024
Indigenous language revitalization (ILR), or the act of reversing the language shift from English back to Native languages, is an essential task. Since their inception, tribal colleges and universities (TCUs) have worked to support and often lead language communities in this task. Since its beginning, Sitting Bull College (SBC), located on the…
Descriptors: Minority Serving Institutions, Tribally Controlled Education, Indigenous Knowledge, American Indian Languages
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
Theresa Jean Ambo; Stephen M. Gavazzi – Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement, 2024
This reflective essay addresses the nexus of two recent events in the United States: (1) the public scrutiny of the relationship between land grant universities and the expropriation of Indigenous lands and (2)the often uncritical and rapid uptake of settler land acknowledgments at public college and university events. We argue that written land…
Descriptors: Land Grant Universities, Indigenous Populations, American Indians, Land Settlement
Monica Etsitty-Dorame – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This qualitative study explored leadership in higher education through the perspectives of six Native American women faculty at a southwest university. The study utilized a Dine informed conceptual framework incorporating the Dine Philosophy of education, the Dine philosophy of life (Sa'ah Naaghai Bik'eh Hozhoon - SNBH), and the Dine ceremonial…
Descriptors: Females, American Indians, Women Faculty, Women Administrators
Stephanie West; Heather Francis; Cally Flox; Brenda Beyal; Emily Soderborg; Jason McDonald – International Journal of Designs for Learning, 2024
In 2018, the BYU ARTS Partnership Native American Curriculum Initiative (NACI) was developed in response to teacher questions regarding the teaching of Native topics. Despite increased movements towards reconciliation, Native groups continue to be marginalized in Westernized educational settings. Additionally, teachers lack clear guidelines…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Instructional Design, American Indians, Partnerships in Education
Sara F. Waters; Meenakshi Richardson; Sara R. Mills; Alvina Marris; Fawn Harris; Myra Parker – Child Development, 2024
Healthy Indigenous child development is grounded in Indigenous ways of knowing and being. Attachment theory has been influential in understanding the significance of parenting for infant development in Western science but has focused on child-caregiver bonds predominantly within the parent-child dyad. To bring forth Indigenous perspectives…
Descriptors: Caregiver Child Relationship, Tribal Sovereignty, Attachment Behavior, Indigenous Populations
Diego Román; Luis Gonzalez-Quizhpe – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2024
Drawing from Critical Latinx Indigeneities, this study explored how Kichwa Saraguro families are (re)creating their Indigeneity and reclaiming their Kichwa language in rural areas of Wisconsin. Using a subset of data gathered through ethnographic work, we report on interviews with 10 members of the Saraguro community as they described the…
Descriptors: American Indians, Immigrants, Self Concept, Social Networks
Debra A. Giambo – i.e.: inquiry in education, 2024
In a university course on the Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico, students engaged in a scaffolded inquiry project to consider connections between individual major areas of study or intended career paths and the Zuni Pueblo. Students completed project tasks prior to, during, and after the trip, and analyzed information gathered to answer their inquiry…
Descriptors: American Indians, Courses, College Students, Universities
Elliot Cochran; April L. O'Brien – Community Literacy Journal, 2024
This article seeks to determine how and why countermemory shifts from being a fringe narrative to being a part of the U.S.'s collective narrative. We establish two complementary--and often interlocking--reasons for this shift: 1) The role of media portrayals in film and series, and 2) The impact of grassroots community-engaged public memory…
Descriptors: Memory, Disadvantaged, Power Structure, Community Involvement
Guillem Belmar Viernes – ProQuest LLC, 2024
There is a significant diaspora of Mixtec people residing along California's Central Coast, mostly working in the agricultural sector. The new realities in the diaspora have brought Mixtec varieties in contact in new contexts where they co-exist with other Mexican Indigenous languages, as well as with Spanish and English. We urgently need more…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, American Indian Culture, Immigrants, American Indians
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