Native American/Indian Education
- Overview
- Meet the Staff
- Contact Us
- Community Partners
- Scholarship & Financial Aid Information
- Middle School & High School Enrichment Programs
- Parent Resources
- Teacher Resources
- American Indian & Indigenous Education Links
- Program Calendar
- Indian Policies and Procedures
- Native American Parent Organization
- Indian Education Committee - Agendas and Minutes
- Social Services Resouces
- Indigenous Peoples' Day 2021
- Cultural Awareness Powerpoint
- NAESP 2022-2023 Needs Assessment Survey
- Tunnel Fire Information
Teacher Resources
Native American Websites & Links
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Heard Museum
"Since its founding in 1929, the Heard Museum has grown in size and stature to become recognized internationally for the quality of its collections, world-class exhibitions, educational programming and its unmatched festivals. Dedicated to the advancement of American Indian art, the Heard successfully presents the stories of American Indian people from a first-person perspective, as well as exhibitions that showcase the beauty and vitality of traditional and contemporary art."
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Museum of Northern Arizona
"The Museum of Northern Arizona (MNA) is a private, non-profit, member-based institution located in Flagstaff, Arizona at the base of the beautiful San Francisco Peaks. The Museum was founded in 1928 by Harold S. Colton and Mary-Russell Ferrell Colton and was originally established to protect and preserve the natural and cultural heritage of northern Arizona through research, collections, conservation and education. MNA's mission to inspire a sense of love and responsibility for the beauty and diversity of the Colorado Plateau through collecting, studying, interpreting, and preserving the region’s natural and cultural heritage."
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National Museum of the American Indian
"A diverse and multifaceted cultural and educational enterprise, the National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI) is an active and visible component of the Smithsonian Institution, the world's largest museum complex. The NMAI cares for one of the world's most expansive collections of Native artifacts, including objects, photographs, archives, and media covering the entire Western Hemisphere, from the Arctic Circle to Tierra del Fuego."
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Understanding Prejudice
"This page contains links to teaching ideas, materials, and resources, including more than 35 college-level classroom activities and student assignments. For interactive web-based exercises and demonstrations, please click on the "Exercises and Demonstrations" button to the left."
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Culturally Responsive Teaching Resources
"Culturally responsive teaching isn't about heroes and holidays. It's about connecting the classroom to the 'realities of what students know and live,' as emory university researcher Jacqueline Jordan Irvine puts it. Browse our online collection of resources."
News Outlets
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Hopi Radio-KUYI
"Hopi Radio provides a new way of Hopi storytelling, an age-old tradition. National news is broadcast, and how it affects us is interpreted and debated. Hopi Radio provides entertainment and exposure to other cultures through music and ideas. Through Hopi Radio, we reaffirm our respect for tradition by preserving our language and culture in a contemporary context."
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Navajo Nation Talk Radio
"More than your average radio station, KTNN Radio Station is an experience into the great Navajo Nation. Broadcasting for more than 30 years, KTNN offers a unique blend of music. Our bilingual on-air staff effortlessly transition from one genre to another, broadcasting hits of today and classics from decades past flawlessly, with an added selection of Native American traditional and contemporary music. It is almost as if the music and the talent behind the mic are one."
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Links to Native Media
Native Media - Film and Video, Organizations, journals, Newspapers, Organizations, Journals, Newspapers, and Internet News Sources, Radio and Television
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Native Web
"NativeWeb is an international, nonprofit, educational organization dedicated to using telecommunications including computer technology and the Internet to disseminate information from and about indigenous nations, peoples, and organizations around the world; to foster communication between native and non-native peoples; to conduct research involving indigenous peoples' usage of technology and the Internet; and to provide resources, mentoring, and services to facilitate indigenous peoples' use of this technology."
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Native American Times
"The Native American Times was launched in 1994 as the Oklahoma Indian Times by Jim Gray (Osage) and Elizabeth Gaines (Cherokee). It was a bi-weekly newspaper distributed throughout Oklahoma."