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Harper Benjamin Keenan – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2019
Children in the United States live in a land of many nations, with nearly 600 federally recognized Native American and Alaska Native sovereign tribal nations and hundreds more not recognized by the federal government. Although children often study U.S. colonial history in elementary school, many non-Indigenous children may grow up unaware of…
Descriptors: United States History, American Indians, Indigenous Knowledge, Elementary School Students
Mason, Michele R.; Ernst-Slavit, Gisela – Multicultural Education, 2010
This article draws attention to the language used by fourth and fifth grade teachers during social studies instruction and discusses the implications of how this language frames non-dominant groups, as in this case. Via the discussion of segments of instructional conversations, the authors point to the pervasive use of language that perpetuates…
Descriptors: Language Usage, United States History, Metalinguistics, American Indians
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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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Henning, Mary Beth; Snow-Gerono, Jennifer L.; Reed, Diane; Warner, Amy – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2006
This article describes a story of two fourth-grade teachers' journey to create lessons that would be developmentally appropriate, culturally sensitive, and historically accurate in teaching children about Columbus's encounter with Native Americans. The aim of this four-week unit of study was to have fourth-grade students look at multiple…
Descriptors: Grade 4, Critical Thinking, United States History, World History
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Johansen, Bruce E.; Grinde, Donald A., Jr. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2003
After many years of intense debate, the idea that the Iroquois helped shape democracy has passed into the realm of general knowledge the length and breadth of "Turtle Island," and beyond. Although a few brushfires of criticism remain in academia, many people and organizations have been applying Iroquois political principles in their daily lives.…
Descriptors: American Indians, Governmental Structure, United States History, Democracy