Twelfth Annual Brown Lecture in Education Research: So That Any Child May Succeed: Indigenous Pathways Toward Justice and the Promise of Brown

2018 ◽  
Vol 47 (5) ◽  
pp. 271-283 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teresa L. McCarty

As the U.S. Supreme Court prepared to rehear for the second time the case of Brown v. Board of Education in 1953, the 83rd Congress passed House Concurrent Resolution 108 and Public Law 280—policies that would terminate federal treaty and trust responsibilities to Native Americans. Even as post- Brown desegregation went into effect, thousands of Native American children continued to attend segregated, English-only federal boarding schools. This lecture considers the Brown legacy and broader issues of education equality in the context of research, policy, and practice in Indigenous education. Focusing on a core argument in Brown—that equality of opportunity is a prerequisite “so that any child may succeed”—I examine hard-fought pathways toward education justice forged by Indigenous educators, parents, leaders, and allies; the larger settler colonial project in which those efforts are embedded; and the ways in which Indigenous initiatives are braided with those of other racialized groups. Key to this analysis is recognition that equal access and uniformity of education approach are not synchronous with equity. I conclude with the ongoing challenges in fulfilling the promise of Brown—in particular, the simultaneous homogenizing and stratifying effects of current education policies—and what can be learned from diverse models of contemporary Indigenous education practice.

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 91 (3) ◽  
pp. 659-661
Author(s):  
LAWRENCE R. BERGER ◽  
LORRAINE M. BENALLY ◽  
WILLIAM ROBSON ◽  
LENORA M. OLSON

Injuries are the leading cause of death for Native Americans from age 1 to 44 years, accounting for 63% of all deaths in that age range.1 Motor vehicles are responsible for 55% of all Native American injury deaths.2 Among Native American children 1 to 14 years of age, the death rate from motor-vehicle occupant injuries (6.9/100 000 per year) is more than double that of white children in the United States (3.3/100 000 per year).3 To help reduce this toll, both the Indian Health Service (IHS) and individual tribes have initiated car seat loaner programs. Because of widespread poverty—the unemployment rate is as high as 80% in some Native American communities—no fees or deposits are collected in many of these programs.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. S909-S910
Author(s):  
Santiago Manuel Cayetano. Lopez ◽  
Zachary Weber ◽  
Geralyn Palmer ◽  
Travis Kooima ◽  
Fernando Bula-Rudas ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) is the leading cause of pediatric hospitalizations in the United States, with significant morbidity and mortality. Native American children are at increased risk for severe illness during LRTI. Yet, the reasons for this increased risk are poorly understood. Socio-economic status and/or a genetic predisposition have been postulated as possible causes. In addition, the spectrum of LRTI presentations has not been adequately described in this patient population. The objective of this study was to define the clinical presentations of LRTI and highlight the differences between Native American and non-native American previously healthy patients under the age of 24 months. Methods We performed a retrospective chart review during the 2017–2018 respiratory season. We reviewed 357 medical records, and included 192 patients in the analysis that were full term, previously healthy, and met our inclusion criteria. We recorded demographic information, clinical and laboratory data, and outcomes. Results Of 192 patients, 39 were Native American and 153 were non-native American. We found no differences in gestational age, gender or age (median age was 5 and 7 months, respectively) between groups. We found no difference in rates of vaccination, upper respiratory symptoms, cough, wheezing, crackles, increased work of breathing or peripheral white blood cell count at presentation. In addition, we found no differences in antibacterial use or length of antimicrobial therapy during hospitalization. Native American children had a statistically significant higher length of hospitalization (P = 0.01) as well as days of oxygen supplementation (mean 4.9 vs. 3 days; P = 0.006) compared with non-native Americans. Furthermore, Native American children had a significantly higher percentage of PICU admissions (28% vs. 10.4%; P = 0.008) as well as intubation rate (26% vs. 8%; P = 0.04) compared with non-native Americans. Conclusion Native American children had increased length of hospitalization associated with severe illness including longer oxygen supplementation, higher PICU admission rate and need for mechanical ventilatory support. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yingmin Sun

This article elaborates the meaning of policy borrowing and Phillips’ theoretical framework of policy borrowing. Then, it provides a background of various practices of policy borrowing in education and mathematics education specifically. Thirdly, the article argues two contributions of policy borrowing to policy in mathematics education and envision mathematics education policies in future. Finally, it takes China’s mathematics curriculum reform as a case to analyse two contribution of policy borrowing to practice in mathematics education and conclude by envisioning the future mathematics education practice.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 65 (5) ◽  
pp. 1003-1006
Author(s):  
Robert Katz ◽  
Shirley Murphy ◽  
Ann Kosloske

Three cases of pulmonary echinococcosis in native American children emphasize the need to consider the diagnosis in the differential diagnosis of mass lesions of the chest when the appropriate environmental conditions are present. Two children presented with a non-productive cough, while one was asymptomatic. Surgery is the treatment of choice for pulmonary echinococcal cysts. All three children did well after thoracotomy, and one child has a normal roentgenogram six years after surgery. Recent evidence seems to indicate that transmission of the Echinococcus among native Americans in the Southwest is increasing, and thus human echinococcal disease may be of increasing clinical importance.


2007 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-26
Author(s):  
Wayne E. Wright

There is a growing recognition of the need for Americans who are proficient in languages other than English; however, there is a great disconnect between these needs, state English-only education policies, and current federal education policy as realized through the No Child Left Behind Act (NLCB) of 2001. These policies are moving the country in the opposite direction in terms of the needs for heritage language programs which can address students' and the country's linguistic needs. Drawing on eight years of research, this article presents the cases of a variety of in-school and after school Heritage language programs serving Khmer (Cambodian), Spanish, and Native American heritage language learners from California, Arizona, and Texas which have been eliminated or substantially weakened due to current federal and state language and education policies. The article concludes with a discussion of the implications for needed changes to policy which will encourage, rather than discourage, quality heritage language programs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
pp. 75
Author(s):  
Giovanna Modé Magalhães ◽  
Flavia Schilling

Considering the increased presence of immigrants and refugees in schools, particularly public schools, educational systems emerge as a field of research, policy and practice to understand the different discourses regarding contemporary mobilities. In this piece of work, our concern was to understand on which extension global education policies and debates, even being incipient on this matter, interact, reinforce or contradict the different practices, representations and sayings that make mobilities and their subjects an object of regulation and knowledge. We seek to observe the mobilized discourses, in order to fundamentally understand how they are articulated to the paradigm of global migration “as a problem” to overcome, instead of a constitutive characteristic of the world. As methodological strategy, we analyzed a recent set of documents guiding educational policies that deals with migration and asylum, written by different United Nations agencies. From this set, we highlight two central aspects for reflection: in a broader way the treatment given to individual and collective subjects of mobilities, and as a second axis we focused on the way the “figure of the victim” is built and reinforced, as well as its implications, tensions and ambiguities.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-19
Author(s):  
Lan-Húóng Nguyễn ◽  
Eastern Pequot Tribal Nation

This paper analyzes the southeastern Connecticut Eastern Pequot Tribal Nation’s battle with cultural erasure and resistance through education. Indigenous education programs are gradual yet the most effective method of resisting Western cultural erasure from the United States government, because they peacefully invite both Natives and non-Natives to learn about Native American history outside of European colonizer textbooks. The Tribe battles the erasure that can result from external parties’ ability to grant state or federal titles recognizing tribal authority (known as recognition titles) to determine who receives the powerful stamp of Indigeneity and the right to self- govern. My case study focuses on the Eastern Pequots Archaeology Field School project in collaboration with University of Massachusetts, Boston. I evaluate how the Eastern Pequots use a collaborative archaeology education program with their Tribal members and non-Native individuals to resist erasure by decolonizing Western pedagogy. The Field School has gathered over 99,000 artifacts over 15 seasons that dismantle common misconceptions of how Native Americans lived during the beginning of the United States’ history and redefine modern beliefs about how Natives survived European colonization. The Field School contributes to expanding brief descriptions of Native history into a more complicated and dynamic story that elaborates on Native struggle, survival and resistance.


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