On Indian Ground: The Southwest is one of ten regionally focused texts that explores American Indian/Alaska Native/Native Hawaiian education in depth. The text is designed to be used by educators of native youth and emphasizes best practices found throughout the state. Previous texts on American Indian education make wide-ranging general assumptions that all American Indians are alike. This series promotes specific interventions and relies on native ways of knowing to highlight place-based educational practices. On Indian Ground: The Southwest looks at the history of Indian education within the southwestern states. The authors also analyze education policy and tribal education departments to highlight early childhood education, gifted and talented educational practice, parental involvement, language revitalization, counseling, and research. These chapters expose cross-cutting themes of sustainability, historical bias, economic development, health and wellness, and cultural competence. The intended audience for this publication is primarily those educators who have American Indian/Alaska Native/Native Hawaiian students in their educational institutions. The articles range from early childhood and head start practices to higher education, including urban, rural and reservation schooling practices. A secondary audience: American Indian education researcher.
This series promotes specific interventions and relies on Native ways of knowing to highlight place-based educational practices. On Indian Ground: The Northwest looks at the history of Indian education across the Pacific Northwest region.
On Indian Ground: Northern Plains
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Kermit L. Hall , 278-87 . New York : Oxford University Press . Schwartz , William P. 1983. State Disclaimers of Jurisdiction over Indians : A Bar to the McCarran Amendment ? Land and Water Law Review 18 : 175-99 . Scott , James C. 1985.
'Culture,' here, is not a thing but a process, an emergence through time."
Calloway's comprehensive introduction offers crucial information on western expansion, territorial struggles among Indian tribes, the slaughter of the buffalo, and forced assimilation through the reservation system.
Lewis Wetzel, a man who devoted much of his life to Indian hunting and was in many ways the prototypical Indian hater, tomahawked a Delaware chief from behind while the Indian negotiated with Brodhead.45 43 Richard Warrington Baldwin ...
Ranging across Utah, Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado, and eastern California, this title places Native peoples squarely at the center of a story that chronicles two centuries of Indian and imperial history.
In this compelling look at second-generation Indian Americans, Khyati Y. Joshi draws on case studies and interviews with forty-one second-generation Indian Americans, analyzing their experiences involving religion, race, and ethnicity from ...
For their help and advice on those occasions (and others), I am grateful to Heidi Bohaker, Marc Egnal, Allan Greer, Adrienne Hood, Michelle Leung, Linda Sabathy-Judd, Ian Steele, and Sylvia Van Kirk. I also benefited from the feedback ...