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Fraser, Andy – 1999
Te reo kori, a combination of movement, music, language, and Maori cultural values, was to be integrated into the new health and physical education (HPE) curriculum in New Zealand as one of the seven key areas of learning. However, the 1998 draft curriculum relegated it to one of the "considerations" for the implementation of the…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Cultural Pluralism, Culturally Relevant Education, Curriculum Development
Arctic Research Consortium of the United States, Fairbanks, AK. – 1998
To examine the role of arctic science in U.S. primary and secondary education, 58 teachers, researchers, and curriculum specialists met in a workshop in April 1997 in New Orleans. The workshop sought to provide a forum for development of K-12 educational materials investigating the Arctic and to bring current research activities into K-12…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indian Education, Culturally Relevant Education, Curriculum Development
Hooley, Neil – 2000
Being able to consider the full range of social and economic issues from different cultural perspectives while maintaining respect and an open mind is a difficult task. The similarities between the latest thinking of Western cosmology and theoretical physics and Indigenous understandings of the bush and its components are striking and provide a…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Cognitive Style, College Programs, Cultural Awareness

Antone, Eileen – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 2003
More than just the development of reading and writing skills, Aboriginal literacy is a wholistic concept, with spiritual, physical, mental, and emotional aspects, involving relationships between self, community, nation, and creation. Models are presented for incorporating traditional Aboriginal knowledge and methodologies into Aboriginal learning…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, Canada Natives, Cultural Maintenance

Hall, McClellan – Journal of Experiential Education, 1996
Describes traditional Indian education and how it differs from the Euro-American model by utilizing example instead of indoctrination. Notes that experiential and service learning include many key elements of Native approaches. Describes programs developed by the National Indian Youth Leadership Project that combine these approaches with…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indians, Cultural Maintenance, Culturally Relevant Education

Berardi, Gigi; Burns, Dan; Duran, Phillip; Gonzalez-Plaza, Roberto; Kinley, Sharon; Robbins, Lynn; Williams, Ted; Woods, Wayne – Journal of American Indian Education, 2003
A pilot program at Northwest Indian College (Washington) teaches tribal resource management from the Native perspective. The program is built on principles of articulation of both tribal and Western knowledge, support and non-abandonment of students, and developmental education. Student assessment eliminates punitive measures and focuses on…
Descriptors: Alternative Assessment, American Indian Education, Biculturalism, Culturally Relevant Education

McLean, Deborah L. – Journal of American Indian Education, 1997
Interviews with 41 Alaska Native parents examined their perceptions of how children learn the skills and traditional knowledge needed to survive through subsistence activities. Implications and recommendations are discussed for developing school programs and curricula that incorporate traditional knowledge, cultural values, and teaching methods.…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indian Education, Child Rearing, Culturally Relevant Education

Faye, Jefferson – American Indian Quarterly, 2001
An American Indian professor describes how he uses Western science metaphors in his freshman science writing course to help students realize that Western science is only one worldview based on cultural assumptions. Gradually, he introduces Native concepts of science including the interconnectedness of all things, responsibility to the community,…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Studies, College Freshmen, Consciousness Raising

Semali, Ladislaus – International Review of Education/Internationale Zeitschrift fuer Erziehungswissenschaft/Revue Internationale de l'Education, 1999
Defines and documents the interplay between indigenous folk knowledge and modern (western) curriculum practice in African schools. Raises questions of cultural identity. Explores the definition of indigenous knowledge, examines dilemmas that undermine efforts to integrate indigenous education in formal school curriculum, and outlines the rationale…
Descriptors: African Culture, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Education, Cross Cultural Studies
Duquette, Cheryll – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2003
The purpose of this study was to examine the learning outcomes of students who had recently completed a two-year community-based Native Teacher Education Program (NTEP). The participants were 22 graduates of an NTEP who responded to open-ended items in a questionnaire on what they had learned throughout the program. Four women also participated in…
Descriptors: Teacher Education Programs, Student Teacher Attitudes, Focus Groups, Questionnaires
Collister, Rupert – 2001
The Western model of education is based on reductionism and linear thinking motivated by profit for those at the top. Globalization is the zenith of this Western reductionist philosophy. Its proponents talk about technology providing access to new vocational opportunities, yet fewer people control more of the resources and services. People find…
Descriptors: Citizenship Responsibility, Critical Thinking, Educational Needs, Educational Philosophy
Smith, Linda Tuhiwai – 1999
From the vantage point of indigenous peoples, the term "research" is inextricably linked to European imperialism and colonialism. In this book, an indigenous researcher calls for the decolonization of research methods. The first part of the book critically examines the historical and philosophical bases of Western research; Western…
Descriptors: American Indians, Colonialism, Educational Research, Ethics
Burns, George E. – 1998
The Western paradigm of education regards schools as the essential institutionalized cultural settings in which formal learning can take place and as the only socially valid settings in which learners can get a formal education. Knowledge is commodified and may be exchanged for currency in the form of jobs or licenses. Learning that occurs outside…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, Canada Natives, Cultural Differences
Stobart, Henry, Ed.; Howard, Rosaleen, Ed. – 2002
This book presents research into the ways in which Indigenous peoples of the Andes create, transmit, maintain, and transform their knowledge, and the related processes of teaching and learning. Most chapters are based on papers delivered at a round-table conference at the University of Cambridge (England) in 1996 and include contributions from…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Community Relations, Cultural Maintenance, Culture Conflict

Means, Russell – Journal of Navajo Education, 1996
In a lecture at Navajo Community College in fall 1995, Russell Means discussed freedom and responsibility in our present-day world. He talked about the true nature of education, the difference between knowledge and wisdom, and why Indian peoples must think critically about the educational and government structures constraining them. (Author/TD)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indians, Consciousness Raising