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Aboriginal Education Research Network (AERN)
Aboriginal Mentoring in Saskatoon: A Cultural Perspective
Aboriginal Women of Québec and Canada: Path Toward Equality
Adaptation and Decolonization: Unpacking the Role of "Culturally Appropriate" Knowledge in the Prevention of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
Annual Report on the State of Inuit Culture and Society 2005-2007: Kindergarten to Grade 12 Education in Nunavut
Assessment in a Tribal College Context: A Case Study of Northwest Indian College
Awasis Conference Convinces Teachers They're On Right Path
Bartleman's Efforts Continue to Benefit Youth
Relates James Bartleman’s initiatives to institute educational programs that provide more learning opportunities, suicide counseling, and promote literacy and education to the youth.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.26.
Blackfeet Classes Draw Students, Young and Old
Books to Avoid
Border Work
Discussion on educational border work and the struggle for control of education between First Nations and Canadian society.
Building Collaboration, Building Community: A Home for Northern Learning
Caregiver Knowledge and Attitudes of Preschool Oral Health and Early Childhood Caries (ECC)
Circling the Drum: A National Aboriginal Family Literacy Strategy
Coastal Corridor Consortium: Aboriginal Services Plan
Conceptualizing American Indian/Alaska Native College Students' Classroom Experiences: Negotiating Cultural Identity Between Faculty and Students
Connecting Academics, Indigenous Knowledge, and Commitment to Community: High School Students' Perceptions of a Community-Based Education
Connecting Mathematics and Cultural Relevancy for Adult Aboriginal Learners
The Construction of an Intercultural Sensitizer Training Non-Navajo Personnel
The Consultation on Improving Post-Secondary Outcomes for First Nations and Métis Students in Southern Manitoba: Final Report
Converging Indigenous and Western Knowledge Systems: Implications for Tertiary Education
Conversations About Indigenous Counselling and Psychotherapy
Explores some of the key issues in working with indigenous cultural traditions written by counselors and counselor educators who have worked in the South Pacific.
Cooperative Learning and the Education of American Indian/Alaskan Native Students: A Review of the Literature and Suggestions For Implementation
Counseling Intervention and American Indian Tradition: An Integrative Approach
Creating a Third Space for Authentic Biculturalism: Examples From Math in a Cultural Context
The Cultural Divide in Science Education for Aboriginal Learners
Decolonizing Pedagogy: Teaching Louise Erdrich's The Bingo Palace
Decolonizing Schools
Defining Quality: New Insights for Training Practitioners
Deg Xinag Oral Traditions: Reconnecting Indigenous Language And Education Through Traditional Narratives
Indigenous Studies Thesis (PhD) -- University of Alaska, 2007.
Diabetes Education in Tribal Schools
Discourses of Cultural Relevance in Nunavut Schooling
Discussion Paper: Redefining Success in Aboriginal Learning Workshop, February 8-9, 2007
Disrupting Molded Images: Identities, Responsibilities and Relationships— Teachers and Indigenous Subject Material
Educating Aboriginal Canadians
Education as a Healing Process
Education Transformation: Issues for Implementing An Aboriginal Choice School in Prince George, B.C.
Educational Innovation at Lummi
Engagement and the Northern School Setting: A Critical Ethnography Among the Tlicho First Nation of Behchoko, NWT
The Evolution of Mi'kmaw Education: Charting the Challenges, the Failures and the Successes
Examining American Indians' Recall of Cultural Inclusion in School
Exploring Motion-Related Technology Through a First Nations' Game: A Lesson to Support Science 10
Lesson from the unit in the Science 10 Curriculum Guide entitled Physical Science: Motion in Our World (MW), which can be used as an introduction to the concept of motion. The lesson uses a First Nations’ game, snow snakes, to illustrate motion.