1 / 27

Goals

Goals . To understand true complexity and diversity of Natives as people To get a sense of how Native students are doing in school today To understand where Native people reside To understand that you can make the difference. Phases of American Indian History.

dotty
Télécharger la présentation

Goals

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Goals • To understand true complexity and diversity of Natives as people • To get a sense of how Native students are doing in school today • To understand where Native people reside • To understand that you can make the difference

  2. Phases of American Indian History • Pre-history, Pre-contact (<1491) • Early Colonization (1500-1700) • Treaties, Conflicts & Indian Wars (1700-1815; 1850-1880) • Removal Trends and Reservation (1815-1900) • Coercive Assimilation (1900-1960s) • Termination Period (1950-1970s) • Self Determination (1960 – present)

  3. American Indian Population • <1491: ~6,000,000 people in what is now the United States by current anthropological debate. • 1900: 237,000 American Indians survive colonization, disease, warfare, and genocide. (95% population decrease, varies by tribe) • 2000: 2.4 million (1%) reported American Indian and/or Alaskan Native in census, a subset included in the 4.3m (1.5%) reporting as AI.AN and one other race. • 1970-1990, US census increase of 1.2m Indian people, with growth due to more self-identification by individuals with their Native American Heritage.

  4. American Indians & Alaska Natives today 562 Federally-recognized American Indian & Alaska Native Nations, including 12 WI Indian Nations. ~200 State-recognized Indigenous Nations. Of the over 300 languages spoken pre-contact, ~175 languages survive today, although the majority are spoken only by middle-aged or grandparent generations, an outcome of assimilation policies. 98% English monolingual speakers in WI

  5. Wisconsin 13 American Indian nations / bands within the state - 12 are federally recognized - 1 is currently seeking recognition - The most nations in one state east of the Mississippi.

  6. Tribes

  7. Wisconsin 1/3 of the population is on-reservation, 1/3 in nearby towns, and 1/3 in urban areas. Milwaukee is the largest Native community in the state (9,116).

  8. Outcomes of Indian Removal & Relocation, map by U.S. Census Bureau, 2000

  9. Tribes Represented in MMSD Apache, Blackfeet, Brothertown, Calista, Chilkoot, Cherokee, Chilkoot, Choctaw, Colville, Comanche, Dakota (Spirit Lake) Delaware, Haudenosaunee, Ho-chunk, Lumbee, Menominee, Muskogee, Navajo, Ojibwe (Bad River, Grand Portage, Grand Traverse, Lac Courte Oreilles, Lac du Flambeau, Little Shell, Red Lake, St. Croix, Turtle Mountain, White Earth), Oneida, Onondaga, Pawnee, Ponca, Potawatomi (Forest County, Prairie Band) Shoshone, Sioux (Crow Creek, Fort Peck, Lakota, Rosebud, Standing Rock, Yankton ) Tlingit, Three Affiliated Tribes, Tununak/Calista, Ute, Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska, Wyandotte, Yupik and many more!

  10. Typical Native student There isn’t one!!! **There is so much diversity not only within the tribes but also with level the of connection to the tribe, blood quantum, amount of assimilation, family, SES, and many, many other variables.

  11. Racial and Ethnic Identity Theories Pertaining to Native American Students Traditional—these individuals generally speak and think in their native language and know little English. They observe “old-time” traditions and values. Transitional—These individuals generally speak both English and the native language in the home. They question basic traditionalism and religion yet cannot fully accept dominant cultures and values. Marginal—These people may be defensively Indian but are unable, because of their ethnicity, to live the cultural heritage of their tribal group or to identify with the dominant problems. Assimilated—Within this group are people who, for the most part, have been accepted by the dominant society. They generally embraced the dominant cultures and values. Bicultural—Within this group are those who are, for the most part, accepted by the dominant society. Yet they also know and accept their tribal traditions and culture. They can thus move in either direction, from traditional society to the dominant society, with ease.

  12. A quick history… Over the past 500 years, the government has used various tactics in an attempt to either annihilate and/or assimilate Native peoples including warfare, genocidal warfare, reservations, Treaties, forced removals from lands (Trails of Tears) and homes through adoptions, relocation acts and Indian boarding schools.

  13. Today • Although the government and people of the United States express outrage at oppression and abuse of indigenous people in other countries, Native Americans continue to be a dispossessed and disenfranchised minority in their own land.

  14. Native students in MMSD • Account for approximately 1% of the student population. • Approximately 45% are eligible for free or reduced lunch-about the same for the district as a whole. • Approximately 18% are special education-slightly higher than the district as a whole which is 16%.

  15. What can we do? • Even with the best teacher preparation, very little is known about the ways Native American children learn. • Non-natives don’t recognize the chasm that exists between the needs of Native students and mainstream accepted curricula and methods. • Little is known about the history, culture, and communities of the students’ tribes-and what is known has been derived from mainstream education.

  16. Strategies • Native students tend to be holistic or whole-to-part learners. They learn best when presented with the whole concept before focusing on segments and details. • Native children learn best when hands-on, experiential teaching and learning approaches are used

  17. Strategies • Native children achieve and retain at higher levels and developed more positive attitudes when they learn through collaborative processes. • Learning is also enhanced when dialogue, open-ended questioning, and inductive reasoning are common classroom practices.

  18. Knowing what not to teach

  19. Goals • To understand true complexity and diversity of Natives as people • To get a sense of how Native students are doing in school today • To understand where Native people reside • To understand that you can make the difference

  20. Resources • www.niea.org • www.wiea.org • www.oyate.org • http://americanindiansinchildrensliterature.blogspot.com/ • http://encarta.msn.com/sidebar_701509578/perceptions_of_native_americans.html

  21. Local Resources American Indian Curriculum Services http://aics.education.wisc.edu Cooperative Childrens Book Center http://www.education.wisc.edu/ccbc/books/native.asp Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction http://www.dpi.wi.gov/amind/

  22. References and resources • http://www.dpi.state.wi.us/sig/index.html • http://www.ed.gov/policy/elsec/leg/esea02/pg98.html • http://www.nwresd.k12.or.us/instrserv/indianed/index.html • What We Don’t Know Can Hurt Them: White Teachers, Indian Children -by Bobby Ann Starnes

More Related