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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
Lockwood, Hunter Thompson – ProQuest LLC, 2017
This dissertation is a descriptive grammar of Potawatomi, a critically endangered Algonquian language now only spoken as a first language by a handful of elders in northern Wisconsin. Throughout, the goal is to present an authoritative linguistic description of Potawatomi by drawing on direct elicitation, a corpus of new texts gathered in close…
Descriptors: Grammar, American Indian Languages, Morphology (Languages), Syntax
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Hemming, Patricia; Shields, Patrick – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2015
The concept of a community college implies some connection to the community beyond mere setting. A tribal community college suggests even more--a college which maintains its roots in traditional Native culture and serves the tribal community in a unique way. Located in northwest Wisconsin within the traditional homelands of the Ojibwe people, the…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Tribally Controlled Education, American Indians, American Indian Culture
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Hermes, Mary; Bang, Megan; Marin, Ananda – Harvard Educational Review, 2012
Endangered Indigenous languages have received little attention within the American educational research community. However, within Native American communities, language revitalization is pushing education beyond former iterations of culturally relevant curriculum and has the potential to radically alter how we understand culture and language in…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, American Indian Education, Language Maintenance, Indigenous Knowledge
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Benton, Sherrole – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2012
In the wild river region of northeastern Wisconsin, the Menominee people conserved a portion of their ancient homelands now known as the Menominee Indian Reservation. The Menominee are nationally known for their majestic forests. The Wolf River flows southward for more than 200 miles from its headwaters in Pine Lake to Lake Poygan near the city of…
Descriptors: Access to Computers, Disadvantaged, Higher Education, Technology Uses in Education
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Hermes, Mary – Journal of American Indian Education, 2007
A powerful tool for creating culture while, at the same time, a cognitively rigorous exercise, Indigenous-language immersion could be a key for producing both language fluency and academic success in culture-based schools. Drawing on seven years of critical ethnographic research at Ojibwe schools in Minnesota and Wisconsin, this researcher…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Academic Achievement, Ethnography, Researchers
Wisconsin Univ., Green Bay. N. E. Wisconsin In-School Telecommunications (NEWIST). – 1976
This document describes a film and videotape series of seven half-hour programs about two Indian tribes of Wisconsin. The first three programs deal with the Oneida tribe and the final four deal with the Menominee. The programs are: (1) "To Keep a Heritage Alive," discussing the educational history of the Oneida people and their current…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indian History, American Indian Languages
Grittner, Frank M. – 1977
Based on data collected through classroom observations during site visits in February 1977 to project schools in Wisconsin (Freedom, Pulaski, Seymour, and West DePere), this document evaluates a project on Oneida language instruction. The project evolved from an expressed interest by Oneida Tribal members, elementary school children, and…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Child Development, Cultural Awareness, Curriculum Design
Grittner, Frank M. – 1978
Based on data collected during site visits in March 1978 to four Wisconsin school districts (Freedom, Pulaski, Seymour, and West DePere), this document evaluates a state project on Oneida language instruction. The project evolved from an expressed interest by Oneida Tribal members, elementary school children, and university students in learning…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Check Lists, Child Development, Communicative Competence (Languages)
Philbrick, Roger B.; And Others – 1980
An Indian education needs assessment conducted in Wisconsin had two components, the first a survey of school district administrators (or their assistants) via a four-part questionnaire, and the second a survey of parents or guardians in 20 Indian communities via questionnaires orally administered by trained personnel. Out of a total of 438…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, American Indians