Indian Country: Telling a Story in a Digital Age
Indian Residential Schools, Settler Colonialism and Their Narratives in Canadian History
Indigenous Cities: Urban Indian Fiction and the Histories of Relocation
Indigenous Collectives: A Meditation on Fixity and
Flexibility
Indigenous Cultures and Mental Health Counselling: Four Directions for Integration with Counselling Psychology
Indigenous Geographies: Research as Reconciliation
Indigenous Knowledge and Our Connection to the Land
Lesson plans which can be used with a variety of grades.
Indigenous Librarians: Knowledge Keepers in the 21st Century
Indigenous Storytelling: Contesting, Interrupting, and Intervening in the Nation-Building Project Through Historica Canada’s Heritage Minutes
Indigenous Storytelling with Elder Hazel
Indigenous Women and Street Gangs: Survivance Narratives
Indigenous Women's Writing and the Cultural Study of Law
Indigenous Worldviews in Digital Games: Sami Perspectives in
Gufihtara eallu (2018) and Rievssat (2018)
The Influence of "Super Indian" on Native Youth
Inhabiting Indianness: Sherman Alexie's Indian Killer and the Phenomenology of White Sincerity
Interpretive Guide and Hands-on Activites: The Alberta Foundation for the Arts Travelling Exhibition Program: ᐊᐧᐃᐧᓯᐦᒋᑲᐣ = Wawisihcikan = Adornment
Lesson plans for elementary and secondary school students for exhibition featuring works by Elaine Alexie, Erik Lee, and Carmen Miller. Topics include First Nations groups of central Alberta and the Boreal forest, brief survey of Indigenous art in the twentieth century, abstract art, and First Nations traditional art forms and materials.
Interview: Sandy Osawa
An Interview with Susan Point
Interviews With Loretta Todd, Shelley Niro and Patricia Deadman
Into the Daylight: A Wholistic Approach to Healing
Inuit Perceptions of Learning and Formal Education in the Canadian Arctic
The Inuit Sky
Inuit Symbolism of the Bearded Seal
It Consumes What It Forgets
It's Not Easy Speaking Bizarro Languages
Humorous article regarding the difficulties encountered when trying to use Ojibway to fulfil the second language requirement at a Canadian university.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.11.
It Sometimes Speaks to Us: Decolonizing Education by Utilizing Our Elders' Knowledge
J. Z. LaRocque: A Métis Historian’s Account of His Family’s Experiences during the North-West Rebellion of 1885
Discusses Joseph Zépherin LaRocque, born in Lebret, Saskatchewan, who was one of the very few Métis vernacular historians writing in the early 20th century.
Kahwà:tsire: Indigenous Families in a Family Therapy Practice with the Indigenous Worldview as the Foundation
Karajini Mirlimirli: Aboriginal Histories From the Pilbara
Kim Scott's Benang and the Removal of Identity in Australian Aboriginal Literature
Kímmapiiyipitssini: The Meaning of Empathy
The Klondike Gold Rush in World History: Putting the Stampede in Perspective
The Klondike in Pauline E. Hopkins' Contending Forces
kôhkominawak otâcimowiniwâwa: Our Grandmothers' Lives as Told in Their Own Words
Kon and the Circle of Life
Primary reading level storybook.
Kunwinjku Spirit: Creation Stories From Western Arnhem Land
Landscape and Cultural Identity in Louis Owens’ Wolfsong
The Laughing People: A Tribute to My Innu Friends
Laughing Without Reservation: Indian Standup Comedians
Law, Literature, and Leslie Marmon Silko: Competing Narratives of Water
"The Laying Aside of a Shield": Ethnographic Power Struggles in Oliver La Farge's Indian Fiction
Leadership, Colonization, and Tradition: Identity and Economic Change in Ruatoki and Ruatahuna
Learning Aboriginal Health Promotion: Six Life Stories
The Legacy and Future of the Buffalo People
Legends of our Times: Native Cowboy Life
Lessons from the Earth and Beyond: Bringing Indigenous Knowledge Systems into the Classroom: Educator Resources
Website includes curriculum connections, lesson plans and inquiry-based activities for primary, junior and intermediate grades for three topics: lessons from the earth, lessons from the water, and lessons from beyond.