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Coulter, Sarah-Kay – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
There is a conflict between the claims of Maori sovereignty and the imposition of State legislation on Maori children. This conflict of interest has been given very little consideration in the public sphere. This research-informed article speculates that despite legislation ensuring that education attendance is fixed as a legal obligation for all…
Descriptors: Ethnic Groups, Pacific Islanders, State Legislation, Children
Meredith McCoy – Curriculum Inquiry, 2024
In this article, I explore a pedagogical approach grounded in Native feminist theories and their commitments to place, to relations, to lands, and to more sustainable, just futures. In approaching college history instruction from a place informed by Native feminist teachings, I offer that the college-level classroom can be a space for students to…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Higher Education, Indigenous Populations, Feminism
Bishop, Michelle – Critical Studies in Education, 2022
With schools known to be sites of harm for many Indigenous peoples, both historically and currently, this paper re-considers 'doing' education another way. As a Gamilaroi woman, educator and researcher, I contemplate the ways Indigenous sovereignty is conceptualised and enacted by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the country now…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Tribal Sovereignty, Culturally Relevant Education
Michelle Bishop – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2024
Within an Aboriginal community in so-called Australia, conversations of education sovereignty are being held. These conversations, as part of my doctoral research, are envisioning an educational future outside of colonial-controlled schooling, an educational future grounded in Indigenous knowledges. In recognition that education has been occurring…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Tribal Sovereignty, Indigenous Knowledge
Fi Belcher – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
As global concerns about climate change deepen, Australian sustainability curriculum plays an increasingly significant role in the way students relate to concepts of home, belonging, and the future. Such futures are imagined in a local context shaped both by ongoing colonial processes and the continued presence of First Peoples, in which…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Colonialism, Sustainable Development, Indigenous Populations
David Sway-la Duenas; Cheryl Wapesa-Mays; Bart Brewer; Sui-Lan Hookano; Cinnamon Bear; Ellen Ebert; Cheryl Lydon; Nancy Nelson; Rachel Dehn; Danielle Kuchler; Elsie Mitchell; Kathryn Kurtz; Annitra Peck; Priscilla Brotherton; Kelsie Fowler – Connected Science Learning, 2024
Histories are important, and as such this article begins with a look into how the ClimeTime network, a Washington State science education network, came to learn from (and with) Indigenous partners to design climate education that honors Native climate expertise. The article focuses first on grandmother and mother networks, listening sessions,…
Descriptors: Climate, Science Education, Indigenous Populations, Partnerships in Education
Archie Thomas – Critical Studies in Education, 2024
Schooling has been a site of harm for Indigenous people in settler colonial contexts, as a tool of dispossession, assimilation and separation from country and kin. However, schools have simultaneously been sites to work against this and build alternatives to settler colonial systems that nourish Indigenous futures. This article centers the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Colonialism, Educational Policy
Cynthia Benally; Daniel Piper – Bilingual Research Journal, 2024
Using a sociocultural approach with Indigenous epistemology, we examine language policies related to Lau. We researched how Lau impacted Native language policies through the "Sinajini v. Board of Education of San Juan School District." Native education rights are embedded in treaty rights. As such, Native students have unique statuses…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Educational Legislation, Indigenous Knowledge, Language Minorities
Sabzalian, Leilani – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2019
Indigenous studies complicates and advances existing notions of citizenship education, in particular, by making visible ongoing legacies of colonialism and foregrounding Indigenous sovereignty. In this article, the author examines how the erasure of Indigenous citizenship, nationhood, and sovereignty permeates multicultural citizenship education.…
Descriptors: American Indians, Tribal Sovereignty, Multicultural Education, Citizenship Education
Washington State Department of Children, Youth, and Families, 2021
This report was written in compliance with Senate Bill 5437 Section 6, to explore the development of a Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF) Early Childhood Education and Assistance Program (ECEAP) Tribal Pathway that meets the needs of Tribal Sovereign Nations in providing ECEAP in their communities and decreasing the opportunity gap…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, American Indians, Tribally Controlled Education, State Programs
McCoy, Meredith L.; Villeneuve, Matthew – History of Education Quarterly, 2020
Federal agents, church officials, and education reformers have long used schooling as a weapon to eliminate Indigenous people; at the same time, Indigenous individuals and communities have long repurposed schooling to protect tribal sovereignty, reconstitute their communities, and shape Indigenous futures. Joining scholarship that speaks to…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational History, Federal Indian Relationship, Tribal Sovereignty
Martin, Joseph; Guy, Elmer – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2023
For many American Indian citizens, especially those in rural reservation communities, a number of circumstances diminish the standard of living and the prospects for cultivating Native ways of knowing for a better future. One possible pathway to ensure that future is through a partnership between tribes, universities, and tribal colleges and…
Descriptors: Minority Serving Institutions, Tribally Controlled Education, Tribal Sovereignty, American Indian Students
David M. Grant – College Composition and Communication, 2017
Examining the "chanupa," or ceremonial pipe, from a Lakota perspective reveals it as responding to a particular ontology and extends indigenous rhetorics to consider the ontological dimensions of communication. Distinctions between indigenous rhetorics and new materialist rhetorics bring greater attention to how groups and individuals…
Descriptors: American Indians, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, American Indian Culture
Castagno, Angelina E.; Garcia, David R.; Blalock, Nicole – Journal of School Choice, 2016
Despite the plethora of schooling options in Indigenous communities, the public policy debate, research, and discourse on school choice is almost entirely absent a specific engagement with how school choice intersects issues relevant to American Indian youth and tribal nations. This article suggests that Indian Country is an important and unique…
Descriptors: School Choice, American Indian Students, Tribes, School District Autonomy
Cara Mumford – English Journal, 2016
With a poem by Dr. Leanne Simpson, Anishinaabe scholar and storyteller, at its foundation, this article discusses the impact on Métis filmmaker Cara Mumford of creating a short film based on the poem, while exploring connections between women, language, and land within Michi Saagiig Nishnaabeg territory. The author's epiphany about the…
Descriptors: Canada Natives, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Feminism