Sticky Points: Teacher Educators Re-Examine Their Practice in Light of a New Alberta Social Studies Program and Its Inclusion of Aboriginal Perspectives
Stitching Together Literacy, Culture & Well-being: The Potential of Non-formal Learning Programs
Stories of the Amautalik: Fantastic Beings from Inuit Myths and Legends: Teacher Study Guide
Story as a Means of Engaging Public Educators and Indigenous Students
Storytelling With Cultural Tools: Children's Engagement With Features of Oral Traditions in First Nations Cultural Education Programs
Structural Violence in Canada: The Role of Winnipeg Educators in Decolonization and Reconciliation between Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Peoples
Stuck on the Rez: Perceptions of Native American Students' Experiences in Non-Reservation Schools
Student Performance Data and Research Tools to Ensure Aboriginal Student Success
Overview of accountability measures that have aided in student success.
Chapter ten from Setting the Agenda for Change, vol. 1, which is also vol. 1 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2002.
Student Success Research Consortium: Two Worlds Community-First Research
Students Take off Flying in Summer Programs
Study Guide: Totem: The Return of the G'psgolox Pole and Totem: Return and Renewal
Success Academy: How Native American Students Prepare for College (and How Colleges Can Prepare for Them)
A Summary of Saskatchewan Board of Education Initiatives for Aboriginal Employment and Student Success
Summary of What We Heard: Challenges, Suggestions and Best Practices in Inuit Government Employment: Nunavummiut Perspectives from Nunavut Stakeholder Engagement Sessions
Support for First Nations Students: The Significance of the Aboriginal Resource Teacher’s Role
Focus on role of resource teacher: support students, promote pride, assist students with being in dual worlds, bridge between home and school, and provide appreciation of Aboriginal culture to all. Chapter two from Learning, Technology, and Traditions, which is vol. 6 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the third annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2009.
Supporting a Comprehensive and Equitable Funding Framework: FNEC Rationale for Funding Formula For First Nations Elementary and Secondary Schools
Supporting Strong First Nation Education Governance: Standards Guide
Supporting Successful Transitions to Post-Secondary Education for Indigenous Students: Lessons from an Institutional Ethnography in Ontario, Canada
Survey on Indigenous Teachers Manitoba Report 2017
Survey asked questions about ancestry, cultural-linguistic identity, participation in professional learning activities, language fluency, knowledge of specific Indigenous subject areas, and comfort level in integrating Indigenous perspectives in the classroom.
Related Material:
Survey Summary: Pertaining to Parent and Community Engagement in First Nation Schools
Susan Point: Spindle Whorl: Teacher's Study Guide
Although designed to accompany class visit to an exhibition of the Musqueam artist's work, can be used alone.
SWC Science Instructors Show Science Can Be Fun
A Sweetgrass Method of Bullying Prevention for Native American Youth
Synthesis Report of the Aboriginal Learning Knowledge Centre's Literature Reviews: Responsive Educational Systems
Talking Together: A Discussion Guide for Walking Together
Tapping a Postcolonial Community's Cultural Capital: Empowering Native Artists to Engage More Fully With Traditional Culture and Their Children's Art Education
Tate and the Flyers
Primary reading level storybook.
Te Kotahitanga: Addressing Educational Disparities Facing Māori Students in New Zealand
Te Whatu Pōkeka: Kaupapa Maori Assessment for Learning: Early Childhood Exemplars
Teacher Engagement With Histories of Education: Supporting Educational Change in Nunavut
Teacher, Leadership, and Curriculum Factors Predictive of Student Achievement in Indian Education For All
Teacher Perceptions of Indigenous Representations in History: A Phenomenological Study
Teacher Professional Reference: Aboriginal Education Grades K-12: A Reference for Selecting Learning Resources
Teacher's Guide: On the Trail of the Hollywood Indian: Reel Injun
Teacher's Guide: The Life of Helen Betty Osborne: A Graphic Novel by David Alexander Robertson, illustrated by Madison Blackstone
Recommended for students in Grade 10 and above.
A Teacher's Guide to Student Inquiry for the Graphic Novel Betty: The Helen Betty Osborne Story by David Alexander Robertson and Scott B. Henderson
Teachers' Guide: Counting on Hope [by] Sylvia Olsen
Also includes teacher guide for Which Way Should I Go?
Teachers' Inquiry-Based Mathematics Implementation in Rapid City Area Schools: Effects on Attitude and Achievement Within American Indian Elementary Students
Teachers' Mo(u)rning Stories: A Living Narrative Inquiry Into Teachers' Identities on Emergent High School Inquiry Landscapes
Teaching Aboriginal Perspectives: An Investigation into Teacher Practices Amidst Curriculum Change
Teaching Guide: The Fallen Feather: An Instructional Learning Resource to Support the DVD: Indian Industrial Residential Schools and Canadian Confederation
Teaching with Indian Givers
Telling Our Stories: Voices on the Land: A Performing Arts and Digital Storytelling Teaching Guide for Educators
Terminology, Gender, Education, and Aboriginal Women: A Case Study Corpus Analysis of Life Stages and Native Women: Memory, Teachings, and Story Medicine
That’s Not My History! Examining the Role of Personal Counter-Narratives in Decolonizing Canadian History for Mi’kmaw Students
Education Thesis (PhD) -- University of Alberta, 2013.
That's Not My History! Examining the Role of Personal Counter-Narratives in Decolonizing Canadian History for Mi'kmaw Students
"There Are No Shortcuts": The Long Road to Treaty 7 Education
History Thesis (M.A.)--University of Saskatchewan, 2017.
“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.