"Watch This Spot and Whose In It": Creating Space for Indigenous Educators?
Watching the Skies: An Overview of Indigenous Astronomy Curricula for Canadian K-12 Teachers
After review of existing literature authors conducted systematic survey of electronic curricular resources pertinent to the Ontario context and readily available to educators. Google, YouTube and university databases were searched. Eighty-two sources were identified, 60% of which were by an Indigenous author/partner/illustrator.
Water Journey: Methods for Exploring the Research Priorities for Indigenous Peoples in Canada and Hepatitis C
The Waters of Sexual Exploitation: Understanding the World of Sexually Exploited Youth
The Way We Never Were: Native Americans in Popular Culture: A Proposal for a Virtual Reality Based Exhibit
Ways of Learning: Indigenous Approaches to Knowledge: Valid Methodologies in Education
"We All Stand Side by Side": An Interview With Elizabeth LaPensée
We Are Calling to You: Alaska's Missing and Murdered Indigenous Womxn and Girls
We Are the Future: A Native Youth Narrative
We Belong to the Land: Native Americans Experiencing and Coping with Racial Microagressions
We Can Do Better: Housing in Inuit Nunangat
We Can Do Better: Housing in Inuit Nunangat: Report of the Standing Senate Committee on Aboriginal Peoples
We Can Do It!: The Needs of Urban Dwelling Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
"We Did it Together" Low-Income Mothers Working Toward a Healthier Community
"We Have Bigotry All Right—but No Alabamas": Racism and Aboriginal Protest in Canada during the 1960s
We Interrupt This Program: Indigenous Media Tactics in Canadian Culture
"We Lived It": Stories of Cultural Resilience, Dinék'ehgo Nanitiin (Diné-Based Instruction), and Navigating Between University and Tribal Institutional Review Boards
"We Must Teach the Indian What Law Is": The Laws of Indian Residential Schools in Canada
Chronology of the laws that created and enforced Indian Residential Schools.
"We're Gonna Capture Johnny Depp": Making Kin with Cinematic Comanches
“We’re Not Going to Stop for Anything": Concerned Aboriginal Women and the Constitution Express
We're Not There Yet, Kemo Sabe: Positing a Future for American Indian Literary Studies
"We're Rapping, Not Trapping": Hip Hop as a Contemporary Expression of Métis Culture and a Conduit to Literacy
"We See Hard Times Ahead of Us": York Factory and Indigenous Life in the Western Hudson Bay Region, 1880-1925
"We Shall be One People": Early Modern French Perceptions of the Amerindian Body
"We still need the game. As Indigenous people, it's in our blood." A Conversation on Hockey, Residential School, and Decolonization.
"We've Always Done it. Country is Our Counselling Office.": Masculinity, Nature-Based Therapy, and the Strengths of Aboriginal Men
Social Sciences Dissertation (PhD)--University of Tasmania, 2021.
Weaving Intersectional Rhetoric: The Digital Counternarratives of Indigenous Feminist Bloggers
Weaving Math
Uses techniques involved in creating a Coast Salish blanket to teach concepts of slope and equations in Grade 10 Mathematics Curriculum.
Welcoming and Navigating Allyship in Indigenous Communities
Welfare, Work, and American Indians: The Impact of Welfare Reform
The Wellbeing of Māori Pre and Post Covid-19 Lockdown in Aotearoa / New Zealand
Reports results of the Te Rangahau o Te Tuakiri Māori me Ngā Waiaro ā-Pūtea/The Māori Identity and Financial Attitudes Study (MIFAS) conducted between April and November, 2020. A total of 3,116 Māori responded.
Wellbeing of Māori Pre and Post COVID-19 Lockdown in Aoteraroa/New Zealand
Wellness Interventions for Indigenous Communities in the United States: Examplars for Action Research
Wennebojo Meets the Mascot: A Trickster's View of the Central Michigan University Mascot/ Logo
Short story involves the Trickster traveling to Mount Pleasant, Michigan to speak to the former mascot about the university's persistence in using "Chippewa" as their mascot's name.
Chapter from Team Spirits: The Native American Mascot Controversy edited by C. Richard King and Charles Freuhling Springwood; foreword by Vine Deloria Jr.