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McCarthy, Theresa – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
Among the Haudenosaunee, the clan system is an ancient tradition of matrilineal descent that has maintained the social, political, economic, and spiritual cohesion of the people for centuries. Following the American Revolution and the relocation of large numbers of Haudenosaunee people from America's traditional homelands in what is now New York…
Descriptors: Citizenship, American Indian Languages, Foreign Countries, Leadership
Park, Jessica E. – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Native languages are disappearing quickly in this country, but there are many programs that are underway trying to save Native languages before they are gone. One such program is the Euchee/Yuchi Language Project which uses a modified version of the Master-Apprentice Language Learning Program (MALLP). Elder language speakers, masters, and younger…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Language Maintenance, Program Evaluation, Observation
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Zavala, Virginia – Linguistics and Education: An International Research Journal, 2011
In the Andes, a phonological transference known as "motoseo" has acquired ideological weight. People think that bilingual speakers of Quechua and Spanish "confuse" the vowels when speaking Spanish and that they are inferior to the ones who do not. In this article, I analyze the ideological agenda of the racialized verbal…
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Speech Communication, Ideology, Rural Areas
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Dance, L. Janelle; Gutierrez, Rochelle; Hermes, Mary – Harvard Educational Review, 2010
In this article, educational scholars L. Janelle Dance, Rochelle Gutierrez, and Mary Hermes share insights from their lived experience as qualitative researchers trying to work in collaboration with diverse populations. They refer to these insights as "improvisations on conventional qualitative methods," reminding readers that their…
Descriptors: Classical Music, Music, Educational Researchers, Interpersonal Relationship
Gladwin, Ransom – Online Submission, 2010
This study used oral survey methods to examine first the diversity of Meso-American languages and second the potential language maintenance or loss of these languages among Meso-American language speakers in Wiregrass country (North Florida-South Georgia). Language shift, the process of gradually changing from one first language to another first…
Descriptors: Language Skill Attrition, Language Maintenance, Surveys, Questionnaires
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Henne, Richard B. – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2009
This article expands our understanding of how language-minoritized children's communicative competence interrelates with schooling. It features a verbal performance by a young Native American girl. A case is made for greater empirical specification of the real extent of children's non-school-sanctioned communicative competence. The case disrupts…
Descriptors: Language Skill Attrition, American Indians, Ideology, Communicative Competence (Languages)
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Tsethlikai, Monica – Developmental Psychology, 2011
This exploratory cross-sectional study examined fluid cognitive skills and standardized verbal IQ scores in relation to cultural engagement amongst Tohono O'odham children (N = 99; ages 7 to 12 years). Guardians with higher socioeconomic status engaged their children in more cultural activities, and participation in more cultural activities…
Descriptors: Cultural Activities, American Indians, Intelligence Quotient, Thinking Skills
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McCarty, Teresa L. – Language, Culture and Curriculum, 2008
This article examines current efforts to revitalise, stabilise, and maintain Indigenous languages in the USA. Most Native American languages are no longer acquired as a first language by children. They are nonetheless languages of identity and heritage, and in this sense can and should be considered mother tongues. The article begins with a…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, Language Planning, American Indians, Cultural Pluralism
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Peter, Lizette; Hirata-Edds, Tracy – Bilingual Research Journal, 2009
In an effort to revitalize the Cherokee language, Cherokee Nation launched an immersion program for preschool and elementary children in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. Central to the curriculum is literacy in the Cherokee writing system known as "syllabary". This study focuses on sociocultural and sociolinguistic evidence toward an understanding…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, Literacy Education, Immersion Programs, Written Language
Perez, Carlos – Multicultural Education, 2009
This study investigated how immigrants from Latin America who speak indigenous languages perceive and respond to social, racial, linguistic, and cultural factors in the United States. It examined the multicultural and multilingual experiences of six participants, five of whom speak an indigenous language. There were three interviews conducted with…
Descriptors: Community Characteristics, Language Maintenance, Municipalities, Maya (People)
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Lee, Tiffany S. – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2009
Native American languages, contemporary youth identity, and powerful messages from mainstream society and Native communities create complex interactions that require deconstruction for the benefit of Native-language revitalization. This study showed how Native youth negotiate mixed messages such as the necessity of Indigenous languages for…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, Navajo, American Indian Languages, Ideology
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Austin, Brenda – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2008
Why would anyone want to spend thousands of hours away from home and pay hundreds of dollars in tuition to acquire one of the world's most difficult languages? For Anishinaabe people, that is an easy question to answer. The Ojibwe language is the thread that ties communities together and unites all Anishinaabe as one people sharing a common…
Descriptors: Immersion Programs, Foreign Countries, American Indian Languages, American Indians
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Gronseth, Susie – Technology Teacher, 2008
Theodore Roosevelt School (TRS) is surrounded by culture and history. Located on the grounds of the former Fort Apache Army Post, TRS serves sixth- through eighth-grade native students, primarily from the White Mountain Apache Tribe. Tradition and culture are so much a part of the TRS students' background of experiences that teachers at the school…
Descriptors: American Indians, Art Education, Art Teachers, American Indian Languages
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Charles, Walkie – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2009
The growing distance between heritage languages and youth has become a constant point of discourse between Elders in Indigenous communities and those who could listen. Since Western contact, the pursuit for a "better life" through formal schooling has institutionalized Indigenous youth, separating them from their homelands and broadening…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Residential Schools, American Indian Languages, Educational Attainment
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Escobar Alméciga, Wilder Yesid; Gómez Lobatón, July Carolina – PROFILE: Issues in Teachers' Professional Development, 2010
This article is the result of a theoretical investigation and a reflection guided by a revision of literature and a set of interviews conducted of two members of the Nasa community: Adonias and Sindy Perdomo, father and daughter who belong to a Nasa sub-community located in Tierradentro, Cauca, southwestern Colombia. The article addresses three…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Interviews, American Indians, Self Concept
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