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- Native American Education: Progress Promise | Indian Youth
This resource explores the history of Native American education in America, the ongoing issues students face, and the efforts being made to change the narrative
- Confronting the painful legacy of Indian boarding schools | Opinion . . .
That same year, U S Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, who is the first Native American woman to be appointed to that position as a Laguna Pueblo woman, initiated the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative to examine and trace the impacts of the policies and school system that affected countless Native Americans and Indigenous peoples
- Educator Voice: Teaching Native American history and current . . . - PBS
Dr Mark Finchum discusses different ways to teach Native American topics and hone media literacy skills
- Decolonizing the Classroom: Native Voices on Education and . . .
The fight to reform how Native American history is taught in K-12 schools in California has been ongoing for decades, but progress remains slow Teachers still teach Columbus as a hero and missions as benign institutions, perpetuating harmful myths about the colonization of Native peoples
- 2025 Education News Stories, Indian Law Bulletins; National Indian Law . . .
California mandates Native American history in schools with new law (Native News Online) 1 8 2025
- Striving To Achieve: Helping Native American Students Succeed
This report details the overall school experience for American Indian, Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian students
- The Legacy of Boarding Schools: Understanding Intergenerational Trauma . . .
Center for Native American Youth (CNAY) An education and advocacy organization based at the Aspen Institute, focused on improving the health, safety, and overall well-being of Native youth Hosts the Generation Indigenous (Gen-I) National Native Youth Network, leadership opportunities, and fellowships for Native youth
- Rising Above the Education Challenges of Native Students
Facing several challenges that the average student does not encounter, only 16 percent of Native Americans hold a college degree while 40% of Whites do Since the establishment of U S , Tribal treaties in the 1770s, the education system has failed Native students
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