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The Implications of the Navajo Nation Sovereignty in EducationJanuary 2011 (has links)
abstract: In 2005, the Navajo Sovereignty in Education Act was signed into law by the Navajo Nation. Like the No Child Left Behind Act, this Navajo Nation legislation was as much a policy statement as it was a law. It marked the first time that the Navajo Nation linked sovereignty with education by expressing its intent to control all education within its exterior boundaries. The objective of the law was to create a department of education that would resemble the states of Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah in which the Navajo Nation resides. Through their department of education, the Navajo Nation would operate the educational functions for its populace. This study looked at the implications and impact that perspectives of this law would have on public schools within Arizona from the perspective of five superintendents in Arizona public schools within the Navajo Nation were gained through open-ended interviews. It examined the legal, fiscal, and curricular issues through the prism of sovereignty. Through the process of interviews utilizing a set of guided questions in a semi-structured format, five superintendents in Arizona public schools within the Navajo Nation shared their perspectives. Analysis of the five interviews revealed curriculum, funding, jurisdictional, and fear or mistrust as problems the Navajo Nation will need to overcome if it is to begin full control of all aspects of education within its boundaries. There is a strong need for the Department of Dine' Education to educate public schools with regards to the Navajo Nation Sovereignty in Education Act of 2005. Administrators need more training in tribal governments. Like the constitution, the Navajo Sovereignty in Education Act will be interpreted differently by different people. But, without action, it will be ignored. Within the Act's pages are the hopes of the Navajo Nation and the dreams for our young Navajo students. / Dissertation/Thesis / Ed.D. Educational Administration and Supervision 2011
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A educação dos Jiripancó : uma reflexão sobre a escola diferenciada dos povos indígenas de Alagoas. / The education of Jiripancó : a reflection on the different school of indigenous peoples of Alagoas.Ferreira, Gilberto Geraldo 04 June 2009 (has links)
This study brings into discussion the differentiated schools for the indigenous
people Jiripancó, located near the city of Pariconha in high backlands Alagoano. It
discusses the writing of history as a way to understand the relationship between theory and
practice in the research process, particularly the history of the Indians. It discusses the issue
of culture and identity as crucial concepts in understanding the issues related to education
of the community under study here. It reflects on memory, identity, culture and indigenous
knowledge and experience retained in the oral and the relationship - tense - with the
writing, enhanced by the learning school. It Locates geographically the Jiripancó
indigenous people as an attempt to understand the human relationship with space and time.
It describes and analyzes various forms of indigenous education, the symbols used in
rituals, the festivals, the sacrifices, in order to survive and the ways of living. It displays the
memory formation of a witchdoctor and a Chef (cacique) Jiripancó to understand in a more
concrete way the people here treated. It Shows such indigenous school memory record
works proposed to be used in the classroom, taking care of it in order to preserve this
cultural universe. With this proposal calls for discussion on the history teaching at José
Carapina School which main core must be mediation between the forms of living of
indigenous people and knowledge made universally. It finalizes the text weaving criticism
of the emptiness of the experience of indigenous culture and this type of education, trying
to warn that the school does not become yet another element capable of undermining the
power of this rich and complex cultural universe of the indigenous people. / O presente estudo põe em discussão a escola diferenciada destinada ao povo
indígena Jiripancó, localizado próximo ao município de Pariconha no alto sertão alagoano.
Discute a escrita da história como forma de compreender a relação entre teoria e prática no
processo de investigação, em particular da história dos indígenas. Põe em debate a
problemática da cultura e da identidade, considerados conceitos essenciais para o
entendimento das questões relacionadas à educação da comunidade aqui em estudo. Reflete
sobre a memória, a identidade e a cultura indígena como conhecimento e experiência
mantida na oralidade e na relação tensa com a escrita, valorizada pelo aprendizado
escolar. Localiza geograficamente o povo indígena Jiripancó, como tentativa de
compreender a relação do humano com o espaço e o tempo. Descreve e analisa formas
diversas do educar indígena, as simbologias empregadas nos rituais, nas festas, nos
sacrifícios, no meio de sobrevivência e nas formas de convivência. Apresenta a memória de
formação de um pajé e um cacique Jiripancó, a fim de compreender de forma mais concreta
este povo aqui tratado. Indica tais registros da memória indígena como proposta de trabalho
escolar a ser utilizado em sala de aula, e assim cuidar de preservar este universo cultural.
Com a referida proposta, põe em discussão o ensino de história na escola indígena José
Carapina, cujo núcleo central deve ser uma mediação entre as formas de convivência do
povo indígena e o saber elaborado universalmente. Finaliza o texto tecendo críticas ao
esvaziamento da experiência e da cultura indígena nesta modalidade de ensino, cuidando de
alertar para que a escolarização não se transforme em mais um elemento capaz de minar a
força deste rico e complexo universo cultural do povo indígena.
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Beyond "Business as Usual": Using Counterstorytelling to Engage the Complexity of Urban Indigenous EducationSabzalian, Leilani 23 February 2016 (has links)
This dissertation examines the discursive and material terrain of urban Indigenous education in a public school district and Title VII/Indian Education program. Based in tenets of Tribal Critical Race Theory and utilizing counterstorytelling techniques from Critical Race Theory informed by contemporary Indigenous philosophy and methodological theory, this research takes as its focus the often-unacknowledged ways settler colonial discourses continue to operate in public schools. Drawing on two years of fieldwork in a public school district, this dissertation documents and makes explicit racial and colonial dynamics that manifest in educational policy and practice through a series of counterstories. The counterstories survey a range of educational issues, including the implementation of Native-themed curriculum, teachers’ attempts to support Native students in their classrooms, challenges to an administrator’s “no adornment” policies for graduation, Native families’ negotiations of erasures embedded in practice and policy, and a Title VII program’s efforts to claim physical and cultural space in the district, among other issues. As a collective, these stories highlight the ways that colonization and settler society discourses continue to shape Native students’ experiences in schools. Further, by documenting the nuanced intelligence, courage, artfulness, and what Gerald Vizenor has termed the “survivance” of Native students, families, and educators as they attempt to access education, the research provides a corrective to deficit framings of Indigenous students. Beyond building empathy and compassion for Native students and communities, the purpose is to identify both the content and nature of the competencies teachers, administrators, and policy makers might need in order to provide educational services that promote Indigenous students’ success and well-being in school and foster educational self-determination. This research challenges educators to critically interrogate taken-for-granted assumptions about Native identity, culture, and education and invites educators to examine their own contexts for knowledge, insights, and resources to better support Native students in urban public schools and intervene into discourses that constrain their educational experiences.
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Set the prairie on fire: an autoethnographic confrontation of colonial entanglementsRedCorn, Sean Alexander January 1900 (has links)
Doctor of Education / Department of Educational Leadership / Kakali Bhattacharya / There is minimal scholarship related to modern Osage perspectives in the field of education. Yet, the pursuit of cultural healing relies on self-representation to move Osages toward a higher degree of self-determination, and calls for voices within the community who share zones of cultural and professional intersectionality. Using Red Pedagogy (Grande, 2008) and traditional Osage ribbon work (Dennison, 2012, 2013) as a framework, this critical Indigenous autoethnographic inquiry works to advance conversations about settler-colonial entanglements in education from the perspective of an Indigenous (Osage)-White educator and educational leadership doctoral student. This inquiry uses writing as both field and method (Richardson & St. Pierre, 2005) to explore Osage perspectives related to topics of Transformational Indigenous Praxis (Pewewardy, 2017), White privilege (McIntosh, 2003) as a pale-skinned American Indian, American Indian mascots (Pewewardy, 2000) from educational leadership perspectives (NPBEA, 2015; Waters & Cameron, 2007), and ecologically informed consciousness (Cajete, 1994).
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Examining the Impact of Indigenous Cultural Centers on Native Student ExperienceFaircloth, Melissa 17 May 2022 (has links)
Research has noted the persistence of hostile campus environments for underrepresented college students. However, Native and Indigenous students continue to be one of the most understudied populations within higher education, particularly as it relates to their campus experience and ways in which they navigate institutional climates. In addition to illuminating the campus climates Native students face at predominantly White institutions, this dissertation examines the impact that Indigenous cultural centers have on their overall campus experience and persistence. As the primary method, it draws on 12 semi-structured interviews with Indigenous students at a predominately White institution within the Southeast United States. Findings from this study demonstrate the systemic colonization which exists in higher education through the analysis of microaggressions students regularly face. Unique to Native students, these were most often laden with narratives of erasure. However, in the face of less-than-ideal climates, participants in the study also derived a sense of community, affirmation, and support from the existence of a Native student center. Though participants derived many benefits from having such a space, they also indicated that the Native center was not always immune to the climate issues faced within the larger campus. These accounts contrast existing research on cultural centers. Findings from this study suggests that the narrow understanding of Indigenous identity as an exclusively racialized one, functions as a powerful tool in advancing erasure narratives within the space itself. / Doctor of Philosophy / Research has noted the persistence of hostile campus environments for underrepresented college students. However, Native and Indigenous students continue to be one of the most understudied populations within higher education, particularly as it relates to their campus experience and ways in which they navigate institutional climates. In addition to illuminating the campus climates Native students face at predominantly White institutions, this dissertation examines the impact that Indigenous cultural centers have on their overall campus experience and persistence. As the primary method, it draws on 12 semi-structured interviews with Indigenous students at a predominately White institution within the Southeast United States. Findings from this study demonstrate the ways in which colonization manifests in the higher education setting through the analysis of participant encounters in and out of the classroom. For Native students, these were most often laden with narratives of erasure or the idea that Native peoples have all but ceased to exist. However, in the face of less-than-ideal climates, participants in the study also derived a sense of community, affirmation, and support from the existence of a Native student center. Though participants derived many benefits from having such a space, they also indicated that the Native center was not always immune to the climate issues faced within the larger campus. These accounts contrast existing research on cultural centers. Findings from this study suggests that the narrow understanding of Indigenous identity as an exclusively racialized one, functions as a powerful tool in advancing erasure narratives within the space itself.
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Indigenous Students, Families and Educators Negotiating School Choice and Educational Opportunity: A Critical Ethnographic Case Study of Enduring Struggle and Educational Survivance in a Southwest Charter SchoolAnthony-Stevens, Vanessa Erin January 2013 (has links)
This critical ethnography focuses on the practice of an Indigenous-serving charter school in Arizona and how it created space to practice culturally responsive schooling for Indigenous youth in an era of school accountability and standardizing educational reforms. Urban Native Middle School (pseudonym) opened for four years before being closed under tremendous state pressure from high-stakes testing accountability measurements. This study uses data spanning two periods of data collection: archived data collected at the time of the school's operation, and follow-up data tracking educators', parents' and students' experiences after the school's closure. Careful examination of student, educator, and parent narratives about the school during its years in operation illuminate how adults and youth co-authored a unique reterritorializing both/and discourse, building a school community of practice around connections to mainstream standardized knowledge and local Indigenous knowledges. The transformational potential of the schools both/and approach offered students access to strength-based both/and identities. The second phase of the study, which followed educators', parents', and students' into new school environments, illuminates practices of educational negotiation on the part of participants within geographies of limited educational opportunity for Native youth, both urban and rural. With four years of data collection, this study expands understanding of how Indigenous families choose among available educational environments in landscapes of limited school options and policy labels which fail to address the on-the-ground realities of schooling in Indigenous communities. For the Indigenous educators and families in this study, navigating school choice in an era of high-stakes testing reflects an enduring struggle of American Indian education with educational policy. This study's findings suggest that the transformative potential of both/and schooling has positive and wide reaching implications on the school experience of Native youth, and further illuminates the persevering practices of Indigenous educational survivance in seeking access to more equitable, culturally sustaining educational experiences. With implications for practice and policy, this anthropologic case study of an Indigenous-serving charter school considers the powerful impacts of human relationships on student learning and critiques the injustice perpetuated by snapshot accountability measurements which deny students' spaces for cultivating bridges to access imagined futures.
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FORMAÇÃO E ATUAÇÃO DAS PROFESSORAS INDÍGENAS DA ALDEIA PIAÇAGÜERAAlves, Oneide Ferraz 22 December 2007 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2007-12-22 / This project investigate the indian teachers preparation and behavior of Escola Estadual Indígena Tupi-Guarani Ywy Pyaú, that is in Peruíbe, in South Coast of São Paulo. It s about a qualitative research, that take on the narrative perspective as they resort to the oral history about the envolved subjects, contemplating significative aspects to their professional graduation that help to understand their habitual practice. This research shows despite legal support from 1988, the right of school Indian education specified and differentiated it isn t still assured. By the interviews and the visits to Escola da Aldeia Piaçagüera, I could see the existence of the demand that deserve and need effective and urgent solutions by the public power, because they constitute significative for the consecution of the politic pedagogy project of Indian schools. Besides, the Indian teacher condition as a carrier of the tradition of the group and at the same time as a representative of the knowlegment established puts paradoxes to the teaching profession preparation and behavior. These questions must be equationed by the Indian people s vision in a perspective of autonomy and respect to the diversity / O presente trabalho investiga a formação e a atuação das professoras indígenas da Escola Estadual Indígena Tupi-Guarani Ywy Pyaú, localizada no município de Peruíbe, Litoral Sul do Estado de São Paulo. Trata-se de uma pesquisa qualitativa, que assume a perspectiva narrativa na medida em que recorram à história oral dos sujeitos envolvidos, contemplando aspectos significativos para a sua formação profissional que venham ajudar a compreender sua prática cotidiana. a presente pesquisa evidencia que apesar do aporte legal emanado a partir de 1988, o direito à educação escolar indígena - específica e diferenciada - ainda não está garantido. Através das entrevistas e nas visitas efetuadas na escola da aldeia Piaçagüera pude observar a existência de demandas que merecem e necessitam de soluções eficazes e urgentes por parte do poder público, pois se constituem em entraves significativos para a consecução do projeto político pedagógico das escolas indígenas. Além disso, a condição do professor indígena como portador da tradição do grupo e ao mesmo tempo como representante do saber instituído coloca paradoxos à formação e ao exercício da profissão docente. Estas questões devem ser equacionadas a partir da visão dos povos indígenas numa perspectiva de autonomia e respeito à diversidade.
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The Earth Memory Compass: Diné Educational Experiences in the Twentieth CenturyJanuary 2016 (has links)
abstract: This dissertation explores how historical changes in education shaped Diné collective identity and community by examining the interconnections between Navajo students, their people, and Diné Bikéyah (Navajo lands). Farina King investigates the ongoing influence of various schools as colonial institutions among the Navajo from the 1930s to 1990 in the southwestern United States. The question that guides this research is how institutional schools, whether far, near, or on the reservation, affected Navajo students’ sense of home and relationships with their Indigenous community during the twentieth century.
The study relies on a Diné historical framework that centers on a Navajo mapping of the world and earth memory compass. The four directions of their sacred mountains orient the Diné towards hózhǫ́, the ideal of society, a desirable state of being that most translate as beauty, harmony, or happiness. Their sacred mountains mark Diné Bikéyah and provide an earth memory compass in Navajo life journeys that direct them from East, to South, to West, and to North. These four directions and the symbols associated with them guide this overarching narrative of Navajo educational experiences from the beginning of Diné learning in their home communities, to the adolescent stages of their institutionalized schooling, to the recent maturity of hybrid Navajo-American educational systems. After addressing the Diné ancestral teachings of the East, King focuses on the student experiences of interwar Crownpoint Boarding School to the South, the postwar Tuba City Boarding School and Leupp Boarding School to the West, and self-determination in Monument Valley to the North.
This study primarily analyzes oral histories and cultural historical methodologies to feature Diné perspectives, which reveal how the land and the mountains serve as focal points of Navajo worldviews. The land defines Diné identity, although many Navajos have adapted to different life pathways. Therefore, land, environment, and nature constituted integral parts and embeddedness of Diné knowledge and epistemology that external educational systems, such as federal schools, failed to overcome in the twentieth century. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation History 2016
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Academic Persistence Among Native American High School StudentsBuckley, Tianna Jeanne 01 April 2018 (has links)
Qualitative interviews with 12 Native American high school junior and senior students who grew up on reservations identified the following themes related to their persistence in college: (a) faculty support, (b) structured social support, (c) family support or the lack thereof, (d) motivation to be better, and (e) encountering racism. The results indicated a need for clear academic expectations between the school district and the tribal liaisons, multicultural training to foster positive relationships from the primary to secondary level, and structured college preparatory instruction designed for Native American students. Results also indicated a need for further research into the educational experiences of multiethnic students.
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Academic Persistence Among Native American High School StudentsBuckley, Tianna Jeanne 01 April 2018 (has links)
Qualitative interviews with 12 Native American high school junior and senior students who grew up on reservations identified the following themes related to their persistence in college: (a) faculty support, (b) structured social support, (c) family support or the lack thereof, (d) motivation to be better, and (e) encountering racism. The results indicated a need for clear academic expectations between the school district and the tribal liaisons, multicultural training to foster positive relationships from the primary to secondary level, and structured college preparatory instruction designed for Native American students. Results also indicated a need for further research into the educational experiences of multiethnic students.
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