Our Smallest Warriors, Our Strongest Medicine: Overcoming COVID-19
Storybook designed to be read by caregivers, parents, and teachers to children affected by the pandemic.
Storybook designed to be read by caregivers, parents, and teachers to children affected by the pandemic.
Looks at the need for a sense of belonging to achieve educational success for Indigenous students.
Looks at the Northern Saskatchewan Indigenous communities participation in a traditional economy that complements their culture and values.
Using interviews from the Jasper Indigenous Forum (JIF) the authors examines the struggle for Indigenous representations into how their culture is presented.
Guests discusses a variety of topics related to Métis culture . Interviews are approximately 30 minutes long.
Interviews conducted with Alan Syliboy, Albert Marshall, Michelle Marshall-Johnson, Catherine Anne Martin, Morgan Toney, Gerald Gloade, and Michelle Syliboy.
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.
Examines how school based assessments impact Inuit students and the strength of culturally relevant curriculum.
Examines the parallels between the Sakha concept Aiyy Yorege and the Cree word Pimachesowin towards each group's journey to self-determination.
Story inspired by the discovery of the remains of young woman who lived during the 1600s, at time where there had yet to be contact with Europeans.
Revised edition.
Using an Indigenous sweat lodge ceremony to analyze the connective stones theory as a research tool.
Environmental Studies Major Project Report (MES) -- York University, 2020.
Describes uses of moss and the soapberry bush.
Using photovoice to examine food sovereignty to engage urban Indigenous youth to contribute to their communities and reconnect with their culture.