My Family
Story suitable for Grades K-3.
My Indian, Written by Mi'sel Joe and Sheila O'Neill
Historical fiction about Sylvester Joe, a Mi'kmaq guide hired by William Epps Cormack to help him find the last remaining Beothuk camps on Newfoundland. Lesson plan suitable for Grades 7 to 12.
My Mother Tongue
My Name is Seepeetza [by] Shirley Sterling: A Novel Study
Recommended grade level 8 and up. Book is about a girl's life at residential school and her contrasting life at home before she was sent there.
My Name is Seepeetza [by] Shirley Sterling: A Novel Study
My Summer on the Pow-wow Trail
Narratives: Developmental Level and Strategic Outcomes of Grade 5 and 7 First Nation Students
The National Centre for Collaboration in Indigenous Education
Native American Education Research and Policy Development in an Era of No Child Left Behind: Native Language and Culture During the Administrations of Presidents Clinton and Bush
The Native American Experience: Coyote and the Buffalo Folklore Tale Retold by Mourning Dove
Includes brief discussion of Mourning Dove, text of the traditional story and student exercises.
The Native American Experience: The World on the Turtle's Back
Student lesson to accompany the Iroquois creation story.
Native American Indian Art
Native American Issues in Early Childhood Education
Native American Literature for Young People: A Survey of Collection Development Methods in Public Libraries
A Native American Response: Why Do Colleges and Universities Fail the Minority Challenge?
Native American Starlore
Tells some of the traditional stories associated with astronomical features of the night sky.
Native Americans
Five stories intended for use with Kindergarten students.
Accompanying Material: Teacher Guide.
Native Americans in Basal Reading Textbooks: Are There Enough?
Native Americans Supplemental Guide to the Tell It Again!™ Read-Aloud Anthology: Listening & Learning™ Strand Kindergarten
Related Material: Image Cards.
Native Drums
[Native Education Resource LIst]
Native North American Literature in the EFL Classroom
Native Voices: Native Peoples' Concepts of Health and Illness
Navigating Government Services: The "Lived Experience" of Urban Aboriginal Families in Fredericton, New Brunswick: Final Report
The Need for Textbook Reform: An American Indian Example
Negotiating the Master Narrative: Museums and the Indian/Californio Community of California's Central Coast
nehiyawasinahikanisa = Little Cree Books
Designed for early Cree readers of the Plains Cree dialect. Available in Standard Roman Orthography (no English or syllabics), syllabics, Cree and English, and syllabics only.
nehiyawin Bush Cree
Annotated list of Cree language books suitable for use in the classroom.
Nenda-gikendamang ningo-biboonagak: Biboong
Ojibwe language story book about winter follows Nigig (Otter) and Waagosh (Fox) as they try to go spear fishing on the frozen lake. Along the way they meet friends and learn about making snowshoes, the snow snake game, cooperation, sharing and being grateful. Teacher Parent Edition includes translation, breakdown of nouns and verbs used in the story and answers to questions found in the activity book.
Nenda-gikendamang ningo-biboonagak: Dagwaagin
Ojibwe language story book about autumn follows the adventures of Nigig (Otter) and Ininishib (Duck) as they go to harvest wild rice. Along the way they learn about lacrosse, hibernation and migration from bear and snapping turtle. Teacher Parent Edition includes translation, breakdown of nouns and verbs used in the story and answers to questions found in the activity book.
Nenda-gikendamang ningo-biboonagak: Niibin
Ojibwe language story book about summer follows the adventures of Nigig (Otter) and Mikinaak (Snapping Turtle) as they harvest birch bark, meet bear picking blueberries and whitetail deer working in his garden. The animals discuss how to feed themselves over winter. Parent Teacher Edition contains translation, breakdown of nouns and verbs used in the story and answers to questions found in the activity book.
Nenda-gikendamang ningo-biboonagak: Ziigwan
Ojibwe language story book about spring follows the adventures of Nigig (Otter) and Makwa (Bear) as they try to harvest maple sugar. Along the way they meet up with other animals who teach them about boiling syrup, making tools, cooperation, and sharing. Parent Teacher Edition contains translation, breakdown of nouns and verbs used in the story and answers to questions found in the activity book.
Never Alone = Kisima Ingitchuna: Parent Guide
Night: A Collective Creation by Human Cargo, Written and Directed by Christopher Morris: Study Guide
A Night at Hideaway Cove: Lesson Plan
Book about the nighttime activities of animals on the Pacific Northwest coast. Recommended for Kindergarten to Grade Four.
The Night Wanderer: A Native Gothic Novel: Novel Study
Niitsitapiisini: Our Way of Life: The Story of the Blackfoot People
Nipi and Mother Earth
Primary reading level storybook.
nitawi-atāwētān mīciwin = Let's Go Buy Food
niyānan pahkwīsikanisak = [Five Little Bannocks Sleeping in a Bed]
nohtāwiy ikwa nikāwiy = My Father and Mother
North Slavey [Bibliography]
Annotated list of books written in or about the North Slavey which are suitable for use in the classroom.
Northern Saskatchewan Native Students' Readings and Storytellings of Culturally Relevant and Culturally Non-Relevant Stories
Novel Study: The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
Ojibwe Treaty Rights: Understanding and Impact
Designed to introduce younger readers to Ojibwe history, culture and exercising rights and resource management.
5th edition
Omushkego Oral History Project
On the Path of the Elders
On the Shoulders of a Giant: Traditional Story Study
Geared toward Grades 3 and 4. Humorous story of Inukpak, a giant who adopts an Inuit hunter because he thinks he is a child.
On the Side of the Angels: A Memoir by Jose Amaujaq Kusugak: Teaching Guide
Designed for use with students in Grades 7 to 9.