Autumn Reading with Fun Activities: How Coyote Gave Fire to the People: A Native American Story
Traditional story about how coyote, with the help of other animals, stole fire from the Fire Protectors and gave it to humans so that they could stay warm during the winter months.
Ava and the Little Folk: Traditional Story Study
Geared toward Grades 6 to 8. Tells the story of an Inuit orphan who, abandoned by his village, ends up living with a group of magical dwarfs.
Avatar: A Tale of Indigenous Survival?
Averting Ethnocide: Indigenous Peoples and Territorial Rights in Crisis in the Face of COVID-19 in Latin America
Awakening Siberia. From Marginalization to Self-Determination: The Small Indigenous Nations of Northern Russia on the Eve of the Millennium
Award Captured for Aboriginal Partnerships: Forestry Sector Lends Management Expertise to First Nations' Community
Ayumee-Aawach Oomama-Mowan: Speaking to Their Mother
Aztlan in Arizona: Civic Narrative and Ritual Pageantry in Mexican America
B.C. Church Goes Bankrupt
Baawaajige: Exploring Dreams as Academic References
Babo's Great-Great Granddaughter: The Presence of Benito Cereno in Green Grass, Running Water
Baby's Blues
Back to Batoche: A Brief Journey Through Time
Background and Summary of the Murdered & Missing Indigenous People Crisis in Utah
Statistics from various sources.
Background to the Launch of the Young Tidda's Video
Balancing History
Created to be used with the article Warp, Weft, Weave: Joining Generations published in vol. 53, Issue, 3, 2020 of British Columbia History magazine. Designed for students in Grades 8 to 12.
Balancing Individual and Collective Rights: Interpretation of Section 1.2. of the Canadian Human Rights Act
Balancing Values: Re-Viewing the 1882 Bombardment of Angoon Alaska From a Tlingit Religious and Cultural Perspective
Band Builds in Sutherland
Barefoot Books Encourage Kids to Embrace Reading
Barriers and Contributions to American Indian Academic Success at the University of Montana: A Qualitative Study
Barriers to Equal Education for Aboriginal Learners: A Review of the Literature
Baseline Data Capture: Cultural Safety, Partnership and Health Equity Initiatives: Final Report
Baseline Data for Aboriginal Economic Development: An Informed Approach for Measuring Progress and Success
Basic Departmental Data 1992
Basic Departmental Data: 2000
Basketmaker and Archaic Rock Art of the Colorado Plateau: A Reinterpretation of Paleoimagery
Basketmaking Guides and the Appropriation of Indigenous Basketry
Basketry as Economic Enterprise and Cultural Revitalization: The Case of the Wabanaki Tribes of Maine
The Battle for Self Government Continues
Battle of Batoche May 9-12, 1885
Battle of Batoche Remembered 125 Years Later
The BC First Nations ActNow Toolkit 2010
Beach Plays Part of Role Model to Perfection
Beaded Cloth Shoulder Bags: Bandoliers of the Southeast
Beads and Trinkets Take on New Form in Federal Constitutional Proposals for Aboriginal Peoples in Canada
The Bear Facts
Humourous animated short involves a ill-equipped European "discovering" the Inuit homeland and promptly planting flags everywhere as a sign of ownership and an Inuit hunter's response. Accompanying material: The Bear Facts: Lesson Plan.
Duration: 3:58.
The Bear Facts: Lesson Plan
Guide to accompany film, The Bear Facts. Target audience Grades one to three in the subject areas of History, Social Sciences, First Nations and Humanities.
Bear, Outlaw, and Storyteller: American Frontier Mythology and the Ethnic Subjectivity of N. Scott Momaday
Beardy Grants a Historic Absolution
Beardy Quits as Keewatin Bishop
Beardy’s Blackhawks’ Championship Year
The Bearer of this Letter: Language, Ideologies, Literary Practices, and the Fort Belknap Indian Community
Book review of: The Bearer of this Letter by Mindy J. Morgan.