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Bobbie Chew Bigby; Rebecca Jim; Earl Hatley – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2023
Home to nine Tribal Nations, the northeastern corner of Oklahoma (US) is a place of immense resilience, cultural beauty and attachment to place. Horrifically, however, this same area is also home to massive environmental assaults that have occurred as a result of decades of lead and zinc mining. The improperly managed mine waste that has…
Descriptors: Tribes, Conservation (Environment), Pollution, Hazardous Materials
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Lybeck, Rick – Palgrave Macmillan, 2020
This book explores tensions between "critical social justice" and what the author terms "white justice as fairness" in public commemoration of Minnesota's US-Dakota War of 1862. First, the book examines a regional "white public pedagogy" demanding "objectivity" and "balance" in…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Racial Bias, Whites, American Indian History
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Bowman-Farrell, Nicole R. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2018
Culturally responsive evaluation and culturally responsive Indigenous evaluation (CRIE) within the broader field of evaluation are not often included in Western literature nor are they known or used by the majority of mainstream evaluators. In order to address this literature and practice gap, this article offers an overview and a broader origin…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Indigenous Knowledge, Test Bias, Evaluation Methods
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Chin, Jeremiah; Bustamante, Nicholas; Solyom, Jessica Ann; Brayboy, Bryan McKinley Jones – Theory Into Practice, 2016
In 2007, the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma amended its constitution to limit membership to only those who can trace lineal descent to an individual listed as "Cherokee by Blood" on the final Dawes Rolls. This exercise of sovereignty paradoxically ties the Dawes Rolls, the colonial instruments used to divide the lands and peoples of the…
Descriptors: American Indians, Tribes, Self Determination, African Americans
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Emily Legg – College Composition and Communication, 2014
Challenging histories of male-dominated composition instruction during the nineteenth century, this article recovers composition practices at the Cherokee National Female Seminary, locating the practices at the intersections of gender, race, and colonization. Through Indigenous storytelling and archival research methods, the author asserts that…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Womens Education, Females, American Indian Students
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Vick, R. Alfred – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
Plant species utilized by Cherokees have been documented by several authors. However, many of the traditional uses of plants were lost or forgotten in the generations following the Trail of Tears. The pressures of overcoming the physical and psychological impact of the removal, adapting to a new landscape, rebuilding a government, rebuilding…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indians, Tribes, Adjustment (to Environment)
West Comprehensive Center at WestEd, 2014
The West Comprehensive Center (WCC) is working with the Arizona Department of Education (ADE), the Nevada Department of Education (NDE), and the Utah State Office of Education (USOE) to assist districts and schools that are implementing activities to improve outcomes for Indian students. As a first step, WCC staff reviewed state and national law,…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, State Legislation, Federal Legislation, Laws
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Journell, Wayne – Journal of American Indian Education, 2009
Using an interpretive analysis, American history standards from nine states that incorporate high-stakes assessments in social studies are analyzed for their representation of American Indians. Research on high-stakes assessments shows that teachers are more likely to align their instruction with state standards due to mounting pressure to achieve…
Descriptors: United States History, American Indians, State Standards, Relocation
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Bryant, James – Journal of American Indian Education, 2008
This paper is an analytic essay that examines the treatment of the Cherokee Trail of Tears in a North Carolina fourth grade textbook. I begin by offering a satiric look at an imaginary textbook's treatment of the Holocaust that is based closely on the actual narrative of the Trail of Tears written in the fourth grade text. Following this, close…
Descriptors: Textbooks, American Indians, American Indian Education, Grade 4
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Lawrence, Adrea; Cooke, Brec – Qualitative Inquiry, 2010
This study emerges from a professional development workshop the authors conducted with elementary, middle, and high school teachers. The article highlights of responses of workshop participants, particularly their response that the law was about assimilation, in the context of "The General Allotment Act of 1887" and the Hopi Indian…
Descriptors: American Indians, Workshops, Secondary School Teachers, Faculty Development
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Lambert, Valerie – American Indian Quarterly, 2007
The Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma is headquartered in southeastern Oklahoma and has a tribal citizenry of just over 175,000. The tribal government currently compacts almost all of the tribe's Bureau of Indian Affairs and Indian Health Service program funding and runs dozens of tribal businesses that today fund more than 80 percent of the tribal…
Descriptors: Tribes, Nationalism, American Indian Languages, American Indians
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Beck, George – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2004
The phrase "excluding Indians not taxed" appears in both Article I and the Fourteenth Amendment of the US Constitution. This essay examines the phrases "excluding Indians not taxed" and "subject to the jurisdiction" of sections 1 and 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment as they apply to Indians. This essay, through analysis…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Constitutional Law, American Indians, Tribes
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Szasz, Margaret Connell – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2005
This essay explores the common threads of the boarding school experiences of Native American children. These boarding schools and its students possessed unique qualities that were shaped by a multitude of conditions, including the cultures of the tribes represented, the location, the era, and the schools' directors--missionary, Indian nation, or…
Descriptors: American Indians, Boarding Schools, Institutionalized Persons, Acculturation
Department of the Interior, Washington, DC. – 1979
The American Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1978 requires federal agencies to respect the customs, ceremonies, and traditions of Native American religions. This report and its recommendations are the result of a multi-agency cooperative effort with Native traditional and tribal leaders to assure that the interference and insensitivity of the past…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indian Culture, American Indians, Attitudes
Roessel, Robert A., Jr. – 1979
One in a continuing series on Navajo history and culture, this volume presents extensive information about Navajo education from 1948 through 1978 and analyzes that information from a Navajo viewpoint with the purpose of promoting quality education directed and controlled by Navajo people. Following a brief introduction to the series and to Navajo…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indian Reservations, American Indians