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Cris Edmonds-Wathen; Jacobina Gumurdal – Mathematics Education Research Journal, 2024
There are both educational and cultural benefits to first language (L1) instruction, particularly in the early years of school, but in Australia, few Indigenous language-speaking students are taught in their own languages. Teaching mathematics in Indigenous languages requires both linguistically capable Indigenous educators and the identification…
Descriptors: Native Language, Language of Instruction, Indigenous Populations, Mathematics Instruction
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Sianturi, Murni; Lee, Jung-Sook; Cumming, Therese M. – Education and Information Technologies, 2023
Technological advances have the potential to support educational partnerships between schools and parents. While the positive benefits of technology for these partnerships have been reported in the literature, there is still incomprehension about how to best use this technology to meet the needs of Indigenous parents. Given the intergenerational…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Parent School Relationship, Technology Uses in Education, Parent Participation
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Elizabeth Rink; Sarah A. Stotz; Michelle Johnson-Jennings; Kimberly Huyser; Katie Collins; Spero M. Manson; Seth A. Berkowitz; Luciana Hebert; Carmen Byker Shanks; Kelli Begay; Teresa Hicks; Michelle Dennison; Luohua Jiang; Paula Firemoon; Olivia Johnson; Mike Anastario; Adriann Ricker; Ramey GrowingThunder; Julie Baldwin – Prevention Science, 2024
Multilevel interventions (MLIs) are appropriate to reduce health disparities among Indigenous peoples because of their ability to address these communities' diverse histories, dynamics, cultures, politics, and environments. Intervention science has highlighted the importance of context-sensitive MLIs in Indigenous communities that can prioritize…
Descriptors: Intervention, Access to Health Care, Indigenous Populations, Community Involvement
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Tsosie, Ranalda L.; Grant, Anne D.; Harrington, Jennifer; Wu, Ke; Thomas, Aaron; Chase, Stephan; Barnett, D'Shane; Hill, Salena Beaumont; Belcourt, Annjeanette; Brown, Blakely; Sweetgrass-She Kills, Ruth Plenty – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2022
Our purpose is to develop and propose a conceptual framework based on respect, relationship, representation, relevance, responsibility, and reciprocity (the Six Rs), to be applied in studies using Indigenous research methodologies (IRMs). This conceptual framework builds upon the extensive work of numerous Indigenous scholars who brought this…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Critical Theory, Research Methodology
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Okuda, Lei?ala; Reyes, Alicia Nani; Chang, Ethan; Kim, Gwen; Catania, Raymond – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2023
Recent scholarship has focused on the vital role of social movement organizations as key pathways into activism. Yet attention to how learning unfolds within social movement organizations has not been adequately studied. Informed by critical learning sciences, we investigated Kokua Hawaii, a social movement organization that catalyzed a near half…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Social Change, Activism, Colonialism
Kayleigh A. Stanek – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Indigenous Peoples (Native American, American Indian, and Alaska Native) have experienced high rates of violence and victimization since colonization -- which continues to present day. However, little is known regarding the victimization experiences of Indigenous college students. Furthermore, universities are struggling to recruit and retain…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, Alaska Natives, Indigenous Populations, Victims
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Sarmiento, Iván; Cockcroft, Anne; Dion, Anna; Paredes-Solís, Sergio; De Jesús-García, Abraham; Melendez, David; Marie Chomat, Anne; Zuluaga, Germán; Meneses-Rentería, Alba; Andersson, Neil – Field Methods, 2022
A recurring issue in intercultural research is whose knowledge informs conceptualization and design of projects or interventions. Fuzzy cognitive mapping uses arrows and weights to represent stakeholder knowledge on causal relationships and can generate composite theories to inform research and action. Cognitive mapping is accessible across…
Descriptors: Cognitive Mapping, Health Promotion, Cultural Relevance, Mothers
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Clarke, Gretchen S.; Douglas, Elizabeth B.; House, Marnie J.; Hudgins, Kristen E. G.; Campos, Sofia; Vaughn, Elizabeth E. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2022
This article describes our experience of conducting a 5-year, culturally responsive evaluation of a federal program with Indigenous communities. It describes how we adapted tenets from "participatory evaluation models" to ensure cultural relevance and empowerment. We provide recommendations for evaluators engaged in similar efforts. The…
Descriptors: Empowerment, Indigenous Populations, Cultural Relevance, Program Evaluation
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Kylie McCullough; Angela Genoni; Melanie Murray; Darren Garvey; Linda Coventry – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2024
The health inequities experienced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, rooted in the historical and ongoing negative impacts of colonisation and disrupted traditional lifestyles, sees higher rates of illness and hospitalisations, increased morbidity and higher premature death rates than other Australians. Nurses represent the majority…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Attitude Change, Nursing Students, Nursing Education
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Iddy, Hassan – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2021
Indigenous Standpoint Theory (IST) is yet to be widely applied in guiding the conduct of research that involves Indigenous people in Africa. In reference to Tanzania, this approach is new. There has been no study in the context of Tanzania which has used IST, despite the presence of many Indigenous people in the country. IST is widely used in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Research Methodology, Cultural Relevance
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Amery, Rebecca; Wunungmurra, Julie Gungungbuy; Raghavendra, Parimala; Buku?atjpi, Gurima?u; Dikul Baker, Rachel; Gumbula, Farrah; Barker, Ruth; Theodoros, Deborah; Amery, Howard; Massey, Libby; Lowell, Anne – Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 2022
Yol?u, Aboriginal people from Arnhem Land, Australia are at risk of Machado-Joseph disease, with progressive loss of speech. Yol?u are interested in developing augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) systems in their own languages. This research aimed to develop a culturally responsive process to explore and create a core vocabulary word…
Descriptors: Augmentative and Alternative Communication, Foreign Countries, Vocabulary Development, Languages
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Amery, Rebecca; Wunungmurra, Julie Gungungbuy; Buku?atjpi, Gurima?u; Dikul Baker, Rachel; Gumbula, Farrah; Yunupingu, Elah; Raghavendra, Parimala; Barker, Ruth; Theodoros, Deborah; Amery, Howard; Massey, Libby; Lowell, Anne – Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 2022
Yol?u (Aboriginal Australians of northeast Arnhem Land) are interested in developing augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) systems in their own languages to support communication opportunities and participation for their family members living with Machado-Joseph disease. Designing AAC systems in Aboriginal languages requires…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Augmentative and Alternative Communication, Language Usage, Indigenous Populations
Wilder Research, 2023
Minnesota's Preschool Development Birth through Five grant (PDG) is a partnership of the Minnesota departments of Education, Health, and Human Services, along with the Children's Cabinet, to align education and care systems?across the state.?The three-year, $26.7 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services supports…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Grants, Alignment (Education), Program Evaluation
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Engle, Cynthia – Across the Disciplines, 2021
Radical empathetic access theory builds the framework to envision the archives as memory Radical empathetic access theory builds the framework to envision the archives as memory institutions and encourages archivists to redefine ourselves as stewards. When we as archivists practice empathy, we can learn and document all narratives. The root of…
Descriptors: Empathy, Archives, Memory, Inclusion
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Mills, Kyly; Creedy, Debra – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2021
To improve healthcare practices and increase cultural safety when working with First Peoples, it is essential that students engage with challenging discourses that critically engage their social, political, personal, professional and historical positioning. Such engagement may provoke emotional responses in students. However, little is known about…
Descriptors: White Students, Indigenous Populations, Health Education, Cultural Relevance
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