Grand Council of the Crees
I Am My Subject: Blending Indigenous Research Methodology and Autoethnography through Integrity Based, Spirit-based Research
The Indians: Their Manners and Customs
Indigenous Being
Indigenous Words Colouring Pages
Links to pages for Sylix, Salteaux, Anishinabemowin (Algonquin), Cree, and Inuktitut languages, and Every Child Matters.
An Introductory Cree Nīhiyawēwin Course Guide
An Introductory Cree Nīhiyawēwin Course Guide: Master of Indigenous Language Revitalization
Indigenous Language Revitalization Project (MILR) -- University of Victoria, 2018.
Islands of Culture: The Experiences of Post-Secondary Cree Language Teachers
ITWĒSTAMĀKĒWIN: The Invitation to Dialogue with Writers of Cree Ancestry
James Evans, Inventor of the Syllabic System of the Cree Language
The James Smith Reserve Cree Counterbalance I.Q. Test
[Jeopardy Language Games]
Individual games for teaching Dakota, Cree, Ojibwe, Oji-Cree and Dene.
The Journey to Reclamation through Oral Tradition
Kâ Isinâkwak Askîy: Using Cree Knowledge to Perceive and Describe the Landscape of the Wapusk National Park Area
kâ-yôskâtahk ôma nêhiyawêwin: The Representation of Intentionality in Plains Cree
Key Terms and Concepts for Exploring Nîhiyaw Tâpisinowin the Cree Worldview
Kihkipiw: A Cree Way
Education Thesis (PhD) -- University of Alberta, 2008.
kimotinâniwiw itwêwina = Stolen Words Written by Melanie Florence; Illustrated by Gabrielle Grimard: Guide to the Plains Cree Edition
Story about a little Cree girl who helps her grandfather regain his language after he tells her about his experience of residential school, separation from his family and culture and loss of language.
Suitable for use with students aged 9-13 (Grades 4-7) who have completed three or more years of Cree language instruction.
Kinship Terms and Cross-Cousin Marriage of the Montagnais-Naskapi and the Cree
kôhkominawak otâcimowiniwâwa: Our Grandmothers' Lives as Told in Their Own Words
"Land Talk" in Iiyiyiuyimuwin (Eastern James Bay Cree)
Language and Language Disabilities: Aboriginal and Non-Aboriginal Perspectives
Language, Power, and Ethnicity in an Arctic Québec Community
Language Use and Attitudes Among Fisher River Cree in Manitoba
Learning to Speak, Read and Write Cree
Let's Keep Speaking Cree
Lips' Inking: Cree and Cree-Métis Authors' Writings of the Oral and What They Might Tell Educators
Making Birch Bark Talk
The Man Who Made Birch Bark Talk
Manitoba Aboriginal Languages Strategy Annotated Bibliography
A Metrical Analysis of Primary Stress Placement in Southern East Cree
Misatim Pimasew: The Flying Horse
My Grandmother's Teaching
Native Church Opens
Native Elder Translating the Bible into Cree
Native Languages of North America: The European Response
nehiyawasinahikanisa = Little Cree Books
Designed for early Cree readers of the Plains Cree dialect. Available in Standard Roman Orthography (no English or syllabics), syllabics, Cree and English, and syllabics only.
Nehiyawewin: Cree Language and Culture Guide to Implementation: Grade Seven to Grade Nine: Draft
Nehiyawewin: Cree Language and Culture Guide to Implementation: Grade Ten to Grade Twelve: Draft
nehiyawin Bush Cree
Annotated list of Cree language books suitable for use in the classroom.