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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
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
Sara F. Waters; Meenakshi Richardson; Sara R. Mills; Alvina Marris; Fawn Harris; Myra Parker – Child Development, 2024
Healthy Indigenous child development is grounded in Indigenous ways of knowing and being. Attachment theory has been influential in understanding the significance of parenting for infant development in Western science but has focused on child-caregiver bonds predominantly within the parent-child dyad. To bring forth Indigenous perspectives…
Descriptors: Caregiver Child Relationship, Tribal Sovereignty, Attachment Behavior, 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
Nicole S. Kuhn; Ethan J. Kuhn; Michael Vendiola; Clarita Lefthand-Begay – Research Ethics, 2024
Researchers seeking to engage in projects related to Tribal communities and their citizens, lands, and non-human relatives are responsible for understanding and abiding by each Tribal nation's research laws and review processes. Few studies, however, have described the many diverse forms of Tribal research review systems across the United States…
Descriptors: Tribes, Tribal Sovereignty, Research, Laws
Kelsey Dayle John – Qualitative Research Journal, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to outline the contributions of Smiths legacy in Indigenous methodologies and to show how her interventions encourage and facilitate meaningful research relationships with Indigenous communities. It is also a practical guide for future Indigenous researchers who aim to work with their communities.…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Indigenous Populations, Researchers, Community Involvement
Stephen Wall – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2024
For several years there has been a movement to protect Chaco Canyon from the effects of fracking, yet it was not until 2022 that Department of Interior Secretary Deb Haaland imposed a ban on fracking within a 10-mile radius of Chaco. But Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren and a coalition of Navajos who own land allotments within the 10-mile…
Descriptors: Religious Factors, Navajo (Nation), Tribal Sovereignty, American Indian Reservations
Jenni Conrad; Rachel Talbert; Brad Hall; Christine Stanton; Audie Davis – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2024
Researchers and practitioners in social studies education have not often taken up responsibilities to Indigenous communities on whose Lands they work and live. Drawing on Indigenous research methodologies, along with specific Indigenous stories and artwork, four authors of varied positionalities, contexts, and regions offer conceptual and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Decolonization, American Indian Education
Ahmed Al-Asfour; Oliver Crocco; Sandra White Shield – Higher Education Quarterly, 2024
The purpose of this study is to investigate the essential experiences and skills required for successful and effective leadership at Tribal Colleges and Universities (TCUs) in the United States. Utilizing Weick's seven properties of sensemaking as a framework, this study examines how participants developed their sensemaking abilities regarding…
Descriptors: Tribally Controlled Education, Tribes, Tribal Sovereignty, Minority Serving Institutions
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
Vincent Werito – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2025
This article addresses critical issues of how Indigenous (Diné/Navajo) youth construct meaning of their racial, cultural, and linguistic identities within the historical, political, and socio-cultural contexts of the United States of America as a racialized, settler/colonial society. Using Tribal Crit theory, the author, a member of the Diné…
Descriptors: Navajo (Nation), Indigenous Populations, American Indian Students, American Indian Culture
Karla B. Eitel; Alicia Wheeler; Kay Seven; Josiah Pinkham; Teresa Cavazos Cohn; Christina Uh; Ethan White Temple; Melinda Davis; Joyce McFarland; Jan Eitel; Marcie Carter; Raymond Dixon; Lee Vierling – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2024
This collaboration between the Nez Perce Tribe and the University of Idaho aimed to address the unique needs and perspectives required for Tribal Natural Resources Management (TNRM). TNRM involves the governance and caretaking of the land and waters, emphasizing the recognition of cultural significance, sovereignty, self-determination, and…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, High School Students, Indigenous Populations, Scientists
Jill Bowdon; Tia Byers; Kathryn M. Rich; Marissa Spang; Veronica Miller; Elena Singer; Amanda LeClair-Diaz – Journal of Research on Technology in Education, 2025
Computer science (CS) teachers are still learning how to enact culturally-sustaining/revitalizing CS education for Indigenous students. In response, elementary teachers on the Wind River Reservation, a professional development provider, researchers, and the Wyoming Department of Education formed a researcher-practitioner collaborative to implement…
Descriptors: Cultural Maintenance, Computer Science Education, Culturally Relevant Education, Indigenous Populations