Gateway to Aboriginal Heritage
Gathering Held to Help Heal the Spirit
Reports on leadership exchanges at the fifth global Healing Our Spirit Worldwide (HOSW) conference held in Edmonton that discussed healing initiatives, traditional solutions to health concerns, and aboriginal youth issues.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.
Gazing in the Mirror: Reflections on Educating Preservice Teachers for Collaborative Work with Indigenous Communities
The Gender Gap In Higher Education In Alaska
Getting Connected: Improving Online Distance Education for Rural and Remote First Nations
Gin Xilaa: Plants
Ethnobotany lesson plan also teaches associated Haida words and phrases. Suitable for Grades K-2.
Accompanying Material: Teacher Resources.
The Girl Who Lived with the Bears
Retelling of traditional Tlingit story. Lesson plan for Grades 4-6.
Related Material: Teacher resource including Tlingit language wall cards, retelling materials, transformation story elements, reader's theatre script for The Woman Who Married a Bear, and calendar icons.
Gladue Sentencing Principles
Glimpsing Our Past: An Archival Photo Project
Glossary of the Fur Trade
Government Policies of Education for the Native Peoples of Siberia and the Canadian Northwest Territories, 1900-1990: A Historical Examination
The Governor's Letters: Uncovering Colonial British Columbia
Grassroots Suggestions for Linking Native-Language Learning, Native American Studies, and Mainstream Education in Reservation Schools with Mixed Indian and White Student Populations
Growing Up in the Torres Strait Region: A Report from the Footprints in Time Trials
The 'Growing Up' of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children: A Literature Review
A Guide to Suicide Prevention For American Indian and Alaska Native Communities
Gyáa'aang: Totem Poles
Lesson teaches the cultural significance of totems poles, how they're constructed and Haida vocabulary relating to them. Designed for Grades K-1.
Accompanying Material: Teacher Resources.
Haskell Graduate's Skills Transported Her From Cane Field Shack to the White House
He waipuna koropupū: Taranaki Māori Wellbeing and Suicide Prevention
He Whenua Haumako Te Kōhanga Reo me Te Ataarangi
Healing Fractured Families: Parents' and Elders' Perspectives on the Impact of Colonization and Youth Suicide Prevention in a Pacific Northwest American Indian Tribe
Healing Historical Trauma: Relocation of Aboriginal Communities: Case Study
Healing the Bishop: Consent and the Legal Erasure of Colonial History (Short Version for Law & Humanities Junior Scholar Workshop 2006)
Looks at the case R v. O'Connor, the Appeal Court's decision to overturn the original conviction and the Indigenous Healing Circle sentence.
Healing the Wounds of School by Returning to the Land: Cree Elders Come to the Rescue of a Lost Generation
Health and Well-Being of Children in British Columbia: Report 1 on Health Services Utilization and Mortality
Health Conditions at Norway House Residential School, 1900-1946
A Healthy Journey: Indigenous Teachings That Direct Culturally Responsive Curricula in Physical Education
Helping Our Children: An Action Research Project
Heroes of Heroes: Everyone Has Someone to Look up to
Heroes Transcend Trauma
A Heuristic Inquiry of Three Navajo Women in Educational Leadership
High School Teachers Working Towards Reconciliation: Examining the Teaching and Learning of Residential Schools
Hilda Neatby's 1950s and My 1950s
Historical Racial Theories: Ongoing Racialization in Saskatchewan
Historical Research at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada
Historical Trauma: Holocaust Victims, American Indians Recovering From Abuses of the Past
History of the Sioux Lookout Black Hawks Hockey Team, 1949-1951
The History: Present and Future Issues Affecting Aboriginal Adults Who Were Removed as Children
HIV / AIDS Community-Based Research Needs, Interests, Capacities and Challenges: An Environmental Scan of Manitoba and Saskatchewan
Hodinohsyo:nih Star Knowledge
Traditional stories include: The Seven Brothers (Big Dipper); Nya-Gwa-Ih, The Celestial Bear; The Seven Star Dancers; The Seven Brothers of the Star Cluster (Pleiades), Ga-Do-Waas and His Star Belt (Milky Way); and The Man-Eating Wife, the Little Old Woman and the Morning Star.
Haudenosaunee refers to the six nations (Kanien’kehaka (Mohawk), Onayotekaono (Oneida), Onandaga, Guyohkohnyoh (Cayuga), Onondowahgah (Seneca), and Skaruhreh (Tuscarora)) which comprise the Iroquois Confederacy.
The Hollow Tree: Fighting Addiction With Traditional Native Healing
The Holocaust of First Nations People: Residual Effects on Parenting and Treatment Implications
Home-Visiting Intervention to Improve Child Care Among American Indian Adolescent Mothers: A Randomized Trial
Honoring Our Own: Rethinking Indigenous Languages and Literacy
How Can a Teacher Begin to Help Her Kindergarten Students Gain "Authentic" Cultural Understandings About Native North Americans Through Children's Literature
How can Aboriginal Boys be Helped to Do Better in School?
How Raven Stole the Sun
Retelling of a traditional Tlingit story also known as Box of Daylight or How Raven Brought Light to the World. Lesson plan intended for Grades K-5.
Related Material: Teacher Resource.