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Wilson, Shawn – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2001
Indigenous researchers must move beyond merely assuming an Indigenous perspective on non-Indigenous research paradigms. An Indigenous paradigm comes from the fundamental belief that knowledge is relational, is shared with all creation, and therefore can not be owned or discovered. Indigenous research methods should reflect these beliefs and the…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Beliefs, Cultural Relevance, Epistemology
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Tippeconnic, John W. – Journal of Research on Leadership Education, 2006
Leadership, like diversity, is often used in education as an all-encompassing notion, applied to a wide variety of situations, or at times, used rather loosely. The danger with such an approach is the lack of specificity. Yet, specificity can set the boundaries so narrow that one is led to believe one approach is better than another or that "one…
Descriptors: Reputation, American Indians, Alaska Natives, Leadership Training
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Hefner, Philip – NAMTA Journal, 1998
Argues that culture and religion are deeply rooted in human beings and it is their task to understand how this is so and what difference it makes. Asserts that human consciousness must organize itself so that it can identify its most "life-giving" form and thereby continue to direct its own evolution. (Author)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Context, Cultural Education