The State of Navajo Education.
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| Title: | The State of Navajo Education. |
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| Authors: | Navajo Tribe, Window Rock, AZ. |
| Peer Reviewed: | N |
| Page Count: | 78 |
| Publication Date: | 1974 |
| Descriptors: | Accreditation (Institutions), American Indians, Bilingual Education, Board of Education Role, Certification, Decentralization, Educational Objectives, Educational Quality, Educational Responsibility, Equal Education, Speeches, Young Children |
| Abstract: | Ten working papers covered the following topics: (1) Centralized vs. Local Schools, (2) Self-Determination and Contracting, (3) Implications of the Tribal Plans in Education, (4) Navajo Professionals (Indian Preference), (5) Public Schools and Navajo School System, (6) Standards (Certification and Accreditation), (7) Bilingual Education, (8) Guaranteed Education, (9) School Board Authority, (10) Early Childhood. In general these papers raise questions which primarily relate to the concepts of self-determination, localization, tribal involvement, educational standardization, bilingualism, educational guarantees, functional Navajo school boards, and early childhood development programs, all of which point to a growing concern with and dedication to self-determination. (JC) |
| Entry Date: | 1975 |
| Accession Number: | ED098012 |
| Database: | ERIC |
| Abstract: | Ten working papers covered the following topics: (1) Centralized vs. Local Schools, (2) Self-Determination and Contracting, (3) Implications of the Tribal Plans in Education, (4) Navajo Professionals (Indian Preference), (5) Public Schools and Navajo School System, (6) Standards (Certification and Accreditation), (7) Bilingual Education, (8) Guaranteed Education, (9) School Board Authority, (10) Early Childhood. In general these papers raise questions which primarily relate to the concepts of self-determination, localization, tribal involvement, educational standardization, bilingualism, educational guarantees, functional Navajo school boards, and early childhood development programs, all of which point to a growing concern with and dedication to self-determination. (JC) |
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