Aboriginal and Islander Health Workers Spread the Word
Reprint of two letters received by the journal in 1989. One by a person involved in Aboriginal education and the other regarding African women's health.
Reprint of two letters received by the journal in 1989. One by a person involved in Aboriginal education and the other regarding African women's health.
Compilation of primary documents.
Lesson plans focus on Native Americans who are fighting invisibility and creating change through their work, contributions from the past, and current actions which will impact the future.
Literature, Film, and Theatre Studies Thesis (PhD) -- University of Essex, 2022.
Series of 13 videos (each approximately 5 minutes long), geared toward children, explore how Indigenous knowledge and traditions have contributed to the modern world.
Discusses the use of tropes of the Windigo or mystical in Until Dawn and the warrior in Assissin's Creed.
Discusses how mobile health can help bridge the access gap to proper medical care and the various factors that need to be addressed when using it for Indigenous patients.
Topics include: teacher reflections, preparing for difficult conversations, the role of media coverage, daily life in residential schools, reconciliation through revitalization, and making reconciliation real.
For use with Remembering the Children: Truth and Reconciliation Week 2022
Reports results of online survey conducted from November 25-27, 2022 with sample of Canadian residents 18 years or older recruited form Leger's Opinion Panel; results were weighted using data from the 2021 Census.
Discusses some of the myths and stereotypes associated with Thanksgiving and contrasts them to the factual version of what took place when the pilgrims landed in the United States.
Topics include basics, best practices in storytelling and working with Indigenous communities, creating authentic content and using Native talent.
Using digital storytelling to identify the importance of cultural identity for the care-giving of those living cancer within the Mohawk Nation of Kahnawake.