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Heath, Shirley Brice – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2011
Heath takes readers back to Hymes's years as Dean of the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education. She recalls, in particular, his relentless passion for introducing public school administrators to ethnography's potential for seeing what could be done to increase equity and social justice within public education. She contrasts this…
Descriptors: Social Justice, American Indians, Ethnography, Intimacy
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Barnhardt, Ray – Journal of American Indian Education, 2011
This article describes the influences of William Demmert's formative years growing up in Alaska and his years as an educator of Native American students upon his career in Native education policy. It focuses on Alaska Native education during a ten-year period between 1980 and 1990 during which time he served as the director of the Center for…
Descriptors: American Indians, Alaska Natives, American Indian Education, Liberal Arts
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Pember, Mary Annette – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2007
Tribal colleges and universities (TCUs) have a recognized track record of preparing graduates for leadership. Perhaps not as well known, however, is the role they have played in growing their own leaders from student to tribal college president. This article presents a few stories of those people who have risen from the student ranks to lead their…
Descriptors: College Graduates, College Presidents, Tribally Controlled Education, American Indians
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Turner, Caroline Sotello Viernes – Harvard Educational Review, 2007
According to recent data, only 3 percent of all college and university presidents are women of color. While the numbers remain disturbingly low, some of these women of color are making history as the "first" of their gender, race, and ethnicity to become president of a public, baccalaureate degree-granting college or university. In this…
Descriptors: Race, Higher Education, Leadership, Females
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McNeil, Betty Ann – Catholic Education: A Journal of Inquiry and Practice, 2006
Born an Episcopalian in New York, Elizabeth Ann Bayley (1774-1821), married (1794) William Magee Seton (1768-1803). Blessed with three daughters (Anna Maria, Rebecca, and Catherine Charlton, called "Kit") and two sons (William and Richard), the couple briefly enjoyed the comforts of social status and prosperity. They opened their arms to…
Descriptors: Educational History, Clergy, American Indians, Change Agents