Students Thrive in Educational Bumper Zone
Details on an alternate school, the Lloydminster Education Advancement Program (LEAP), which is geared to help high school students stay in or return to school by offering education to young offenders, pregnant teens and moms, students from a lower social economic setting and those who need more flexibility or more discipline in the school system.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.27.
A Study of Indigenous Boys and Men
Attempts to identify, highlight and outline educational and social programs and interventions which address needs of 12- to 25-year-olds. Specifically looks what initiatives have been developed, where they have occurred, and what guiding principles and practices have led to success.
Supporting First Nations, Métis & Inuit Students Transitioning from First Nations Schools to Provincial Schools: A Resource Guide
Survivance, Sovereignty, and Story: Teaching American Indian Rhetorics
Taking It Back, Passing It On: Reverence For The Ordinary in Bush Cree Teacher Education
Taking Responsibility: What Follows Relational Accountability?
Te Ao Māori Learning Journeys of Teacher Educators
Teachers' Views on Aboriginal Students Learning Western and Aboriginal Science
Teaching and Learning Experiences of Dogrib Teachers in the Canadian Northwest Territories
Teaching History for Truth and Reconciliation: The Challenges and Opportunities of Narrativity, Temporality, and Identity
Teaching Indigenous Languages
Teaching on Stolen Ground
“There Is a Difference”: Mi'kmaw Students' Perceptions and Experiences in a Public School and in a Band-Operated School
Compares culturally responsive teaching between Mi'kma'ki run schools and public schools for Indigenous students.
Thinking with Nunangat in Proposing Pedagogies for/with Inuit Early Childhood Education
Through Their Eyes: Alaska Native Students' Perceptions of Teacher Attitude and Behavior
Toward a First Nation Cross-Cultural Science and Technology Curriculum
Towards Indigenizing Higher Ed: An Online Storytelling Series
Traditional Approach Solves New Problems
Discussion with Margaret Wapass, who intends to utilize traditional holistic counseling in order to address residential school syndrome, intergenerational impacts, crime prevention, corrections services and addictions.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.22.
Traditional Indian Medicine Treatment of Chronic Illness: Development of an Integrated Program with Conventional Medicine and Evaluation of Effectiveness
The Transformational Indigenous Praxis Model: Stages for Developing Critical Consciousness in Indigenous Education
Transforming Graduate Studies through Decolonization: Sharing the Learning Journey of a Specialized Cohort
Tribal Education: A Case Study of Blackfeet Elders
Trickster Chases the Tale of Education
Turn the Beat Around
Two Sides of an Eagle's Feather: Co-Constructing ECCD Training Curricula in University Partnerships with Canadian First Nations Communities
Unlearning Colonial Identities While Engaging in Relationality: Settler Teachers’ Education-as-Reconciliation
Unsettling Settler Shame in Schooling: Re-Imagining Responsible Reconciliation in Canada
Use of Native Language and Culture (NLC) in Elementary and Middle School Instruction as a Predictor of Mathematics Achievement
Examines the correlation between Indigenous driven educational programs and a student's family context to asses the negative and positives effects of Native Language and Culture (NLC) within an educational setting.
The Value of Perseverance: Using Dakota Culture to Teach Mathematics
[Visual Arts: Woodland Style Artwork]
"We Lived It": Stories of Cultural Resilience, Dinék'ehgo Nanitiin (Diné-Based Instruction), and Navigating Between University and Tribal Institutional Review Boards
Weavers of Change: Portraits of Native American Women Educational Leaders
Weaving Ways: Indigenous Ways of Knowing in Classrooms and Schools: An Introductory Guide
What is Indigenous Knowledge?: Voices from the Academy
What We Learned: Two Generations Reflect On Tsimshian Education And The Day Schools
Why Treaties Matter: Self-Government in the Dakota and Ojibwe Nations: Educator Guide for Grades 6-12
For use with the virtual exhibition Why Treaties Matter.
"Without Destroying Ourselves": American Indian Intellectual Activism for Higher Education, 1915-1978
Words Are Not Enough: Stories of Indigenous Learning
A Year of Crisis: Memory and Meaning in a Navajo Community’s Struggle for Self-Determination
Yooroang Garang Issues In Aboriginal Health Worker Training: Listening To Students
You Can't Get an Elder in an App: Elder Engagement for Mi'kmaw and Wolastoqey Post-Secondary Education
“You Can't Just Rely on What You Know Now”: Community Teachers' Perspectives on Language Education in a Revitalization Context
Yuntuwarrun: Learning on Country
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