Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
This book provides an in-depth analysis of Native American educational issues in the Northeast and highlights teacher training and instruction that address the experience and needs of the many Native students that attend reservation border town schools. Williams and Cole expand upon the results of a participatory action study that explored the barriers to success for Native American students in mainstream schooling during the process of creating and implementing a Native cultural competency teacher-training program for classroom teachers. They document the evolution of cross-cultural relationships and interactions in a diverse schooling context and aim to usher in concrete changes in school experiences and educational outcomes for Native American students by fostering non-Native teachers' growth in cultural competency.
Synopsis
Chapter 1. Introduction Chapter 2. The Study Chapter 3. Cultural DisconnectChapter 4. History of Mohawk Education in Mainstream Schooling Chapter 5. Mistrust Chapter 6. 200% Education: The Two-Strand Wampum TreatyChapter 7. Developmental Trajectory of Understanding: A Model for ChangeChapter 8. The Teacher Training Program: Content and ImplementationChapter 9. Cultural Competency: Outcomes and Applications
Synopsis
Studies the collaborative efforts of Native and non-Native educators and demonstrates how the discordant relationship between the Native and non-Native communities negatively impact students, teachers, and the school district as a whole
Leverages cross-cultural collaboration in the service of broad-based, district-wide systemic change for heterogeneous, reservation border town communities
Analysis of the results of the study culminates in a practical, research-based model for teacher training in Native cultural competency applicable to a variety of regional and national school settings