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Region 16 Comprehensive Center, 2024
In 2017, the Oregon Legislature enacted Senate Bill 13, known as Tribal History/Shared History. This bill was the culmination of decades of organizing and curriculum work by the nine federally recognized Tribes within Oregon. The law directs the Oregon Department of Education to develop a K-12 Native American curriculum in partnership with Oregon…
Descriptors: History Instruction, American Indian History, State Legislation, Elementary Secondary Education
Region 16 Comprehensive Center, 2024
In 2017, the Oregon Legislature enacted Senate Bill 13, known as Tribal History/Shared History. This bill was the culmination of decades of organizing and curriculum development by the nine federally recognized Tribes in Oregon. The law directs the Oregon Department of Education to develop a K-12 Native American curriculum in partnership with…
Descriptors: State Legislation, State History, American Indian History, History Instruction
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Writer, Jeanette Haynes – SoJo Journal: Educational Foundations and Social Justice Education, 2022
After the September 11, 2001, terrorism attack, bumper stickers appeared vowing "9/11 We Will Never Forget," yet Indigenous Peoples' telling of historical events of terrorism and violence is dismissed or expected to be forgotten. Critical race theory and tribal critical race theory are used to conduct an analysis of subjugated Indigenous…
Descriptors: Terrorism, Social Justice, Violence, American Indians
Egiebor, Esohe E.; Foster, Ellen J. – Geography Teacher, 2018
This lesson describes a geohistorical unit in which the students demonstrate their understanding of significant events in American history. The purpose of the lesson is for students to understand that the rapid population growth of the United States was made possible by the removal of Native Americans. In the first part of the lesson, students use…
Descriptors: Geography, United States History, American Indian History, Maps
M. J. Reinhardt; T. Moses; K. Arkansas; B. Ormson; G. K. Ward – National Comprehensive Center, 2020
There is a pressing opportunity to increase and improve behavioral health care services for Native youth. This brief describes several approaches to address the health needs of Native communities, including culturally responsive behavioral health supports, circles of care, and wrap-around services. The National Comprehensive Center's American…
Descriptors: American Indians, Youth, Health Needs, Cultural Relevance
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Warrington, Jacinta – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2017
Haskell Indian Nations University opened 133 years ago, on September 17, 1884, as the U.S. Training and Industrial School--one of three original tribal boarding schools funded by the United States Congress. Three years later the school changed its name to Haskell Institute in honor of Chase Dudley Haskell, a U.S. representative from the Second…
Descriptors: Tribes, American Indian Education, Tribally Controlled Education, United States History
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Debenport, Erin – Association of Mexican American Educators Journal, 2018
Discussions about migration, geography, and Indigenous language use are key ways that community members perform, negotiate, and contest identities and politics in multilingual Ysleta del Sur Pueblo, a federally-recognized Native nation located within the city of El Paso, Texas. This linguistic anthropological piece illustrates how tribal members…
Descriptors: American Indians, Self Concept, Multilingualism, American Indian Languages
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Chandler, Prentice T. – Social Education, 2011
Manifest Destiny, the idea that Providence guided the conquest and settlement of North America, is one of the most contested ideas in American culture and history. One's opinion about this central aspect of American mythology depends heavily on one's point of view. Exploring westward expansion and the Cherokee Trail of Tears with primary sources…
Descriptors: American Indians, Primary Sources, American Indian History, United States History
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Buckmiller, Tom M.; Cramer, Renee A. – Multicultural Learning and Teaching, 2013
Native students often desire an education that will enable them to contribute to their home communities and facilitate tribal development, while retaining close ties to their cultural heritage and identity. We outline a conceptual framework that provides a starting point for non-Native American educators to consider as they engage Native American…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, College Students, Cultural Influences, Culturally Relevant Education
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Warner, Linda Sue; Grint, Keith – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2012
The presumption of American's noble savage provides the foundation for the creation of one of the world's most recognizable stereotypes--the American Indian. The stereotype, lodged in the minds of most Americans as the Plains Indian warrior, contributed to decades of misunderstanding about leadership in traditional American Indian societies and…
Descriptors: Governance, Leadership Styles, Leadership, Tribes
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Meadows, William C. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
Interest in North American Indian code talkers continues to increase. In addition to numerous works about the Navajo code talkers, several publications on other groups of Native American code talkers--including the Choctaw, Comanche, Hopi, Meskwaki, Canadian Cree--and about code talkers in general have appeared. This article chronicles recent…
Descriptors: Navajo, Federal Legislation, American Indians, War
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Rice, Alanna – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
In this article, the author talks about schooling and the development of literacy within Algonquian communities in eighteenth-century southern New England. With the founding of Moor's Indian Charity School in Lebanon, Connecticut, in 1754, congregational minister Eleazar Wheelock launched an educational regimen that aimed to Christianize and…
Descriptors: United States History, Letters (Correspondence), Literacy, Historians
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Helton, Tena L. – American Indian Quarterly, 2010
Americans in the East were great fans of Black Hawk, whose popularity on tour overtook that of Andrew Jackson's parallel tour of the Northeast. Undoubtedly, then, Black Hawk was a celebrity. He remained popular even in 1837, when he attended Catlin's gallery opening in New York, which included his 1832 painting of Black Hawk. Black Hawk may also…
Descriptors: Whites, American Indians, Tribes, United States History
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Greenhut, Stephanie – Social Education, 2011
When Americans from the eastern part of the United States began moving west in large numbers in the mid-nineteenth century, tensions escalated and conflicts erupted between and among settlers, railroad workers, ranchers, the United States military, and numerous Native American tribes. Incorporating balanced consideration of these diverse and…
Descriptors: United States History, Ownership, American Indian History, Archives
Pember, Mary Annette – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2010
At first glance, Miami University in southwestern Ohio seems an unlikely spot for a major American Indian language and cultural preservation and revitalization project. There are no reservations in the state, nor is there a significant American Indian population. Yet, Miami University houses the Myaamia Project, a unique collaboration between…
Descriptors: Preservation, Cultural Maintenance, American Indians, Tribes
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