TEK and Tech: Building a Culturally Responsive Curriculum for Nimiipuu (Nez Perce) High School and Middle School Students

Date: 
Friday, October 5, 2018
Room/Location: 
Room 10
Time: 
1:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Session Track(s): 
Research: STEM Education

Although indigenous epistemologies have survived generations of colonization (Brayboy et al. 2012), their presence in educational systems have only remained within indigenous communities.  In an effort to support this educational sovereignty, this project will incorporate cultural knowledge in concert with western scientific thought to promote a culturally relevant STEM identity in students.  Researchers have suggested that culture and identity play an important role in supporting students’ successful navigation of STEM career pathways (Brown, 2004; Chang, Sharkness, Hurtado and Newman 2014).  This project engages middle and high school students from the Nez Perce Reservation in Idaho, through a program of educational activities centered on the use of technology (tech), such as drones.  Indigenous ways of knowing (Traditional Ecological Knowledge, TEK) will be central to the curriculum and not simply an ‘alternative’ to the approaches of western science; by doing so we hope to empower students to decolonize the western research methods they have been taught is the ‘correct way of doing science” (Denzin, Lincoln, & Smith, 2008, Wilson 2001).  We have developed a curriculum built around 1) STEM technologies, 2) science communication and leadership skills, and 3) community involvement, that will introduce students to culturally relevant STEM careers and prepare students for higher education.  

Speaker(s)

Christina Uh
Navajo
Graduate Research Assistant
University of Idaho

I am a current graduate research assistant at the University of Idaho, pursuing a M.S. in Natural Resources with an emphasis in Environmental Education and Science Communication. I have a B.S. in Environmental Science from Portland State University (PSU), Portland, OR. My experience includes but is not limited to: PATHWAYS Intern, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Jr. Faculty, Inter-Tribal Youth Climate Leadership Congress; Aquatic Vertebrate Breeding Facility Technician, PSU; Native American Student and Community Center; Orientation Leader, Enrollment Management & Student Affairs, PSU; Volunteer Lamprey and Salmonid Monitoring, Johnson Creek Watershed; Volunteer Moderator, AFS Oregon Chapter Annual Meeting; Chapter President & Secretary, American Indian Science and Engineering Society, Seqoyah Fellow.

Ethan White Temple
Standing Rock Sioux
Graduate Research Assistant
University of Idaho

Enrolled member of the Standing Rock Sioux tribe and descendant of the Nez Perce Tribe B. S. Social Science with emphasis on Anthropology, Lewis & Clark State College, Lewiston, ID. Experience: H.O.I.S.T. lab intern for Dr. Berrie Robison at Dept. Biological Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID; EPSCoR Lab tech for Dr, Robert Heinse at Dept. Soils and Water Systems University of Idaho, Moscow, ID; Intern Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, Washington D.C; IKEEP administrative Assistant,University of Idaho,Moscow, ID; H.O.I.S.T. Mentor, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID.

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