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Trennert, Robert A., Jr. – 1988
This book provides an overview of the history of the Phoenix Indian School from 1891 through 1935. The Phoenix Indian Industrial Boarding School was founded for the specific purpose of preparing Native American children for assimilation. During its first 40 years, the school's main objectives were to remove Indian youngsters from their traditional…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, American Indians, Boarding Schools
Parker, Dorothy R. – 1996
This book recounts the Phoenix Indian School's history from 1935 to its closing in 1990. In the 1930s, the Bureau of Indian Affairs' philosophy of assimilation declined in importance, as evidenced by termination of the boarding school's militaristic discipline, greater recognition of tribal traditions, and early experimentation in bilingual…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, Bilingual Education, Boarding Schools
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Dolgon, Corey – Educational Studies, 1998
Examines the University of Michigan between 1945 and the early 1960s as a case study of the physical and philosophical changes that occurred to usher in the process of university corporatization. Focuses predominantly on one major research project, the Phoenix Memorial Project, that set in motion many of these changes. (DSK)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Corporate Support, Corporations, Educational History
Marin, Christine – 1987
During World War II Arizona's Mexican-American communities organized their own patriotic activities and worked, in spite of racism, to support the war effort. In Phoenix the Lenadores del Mundo, an active fraternal society, began this effort by sponsoring a festival in January 1942. Such "mutualistas" provided an essential support system…
Descriptors: Community Action, Community Organizations, Community Support, Ethnic Discrimination
Child Care Information Exchange, 1995
Describes the efforts of Kathryn Wauters at the Lincoln Learning Center in Phoenix, AZ, which operates an exemplary early childhood program that offers integrated services, is the first hospital-based Head Start program, and works with area elementary schools to provide school-based health services. (DR)
Descriptors: Administrators, Adult Day Care, Biographies, Family Programs
O'Gara, Geoffrey – Wassaja, The Indian Historian, 1980
The article describes the five-year history of the Council of Energy Resource Tribes (CERT); its leader Peter MacDonald; its problems (growth, leadership, youth involvement, culture conflicts); and its advantages to Indians, government, and business. It also notes the major events of the CERT board meetings recently held in Phoenix, AZ.(SB)
Descriptors: American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Energy, Federal Indian Relationship
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Trennert, Robert A. – History of Education Quarterly, 1989
Provides a case study of reform movement dynamics in the Bureau of Indian Affairs in 1930. Discusses the use of excessive corporal punishment at the Phoenix Indian School. Describes the way in which John Collier used the issue of brutality in government boarding schools to bring down the Bureau of Indian Affairs administration. (KO)
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian History, American Indians, Boarding Schools
Lindauer, Owen – 1997
The Phoenix Indian School, which served as a coeducational federal boarding school for American Indian students between 1891 and 1990, was partially excavated in 1995. Drawing upon written records, books, student recollections, and the school newspaper, this report summarizes what was learned from the excavation about life at the school. The first…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indian History
Pfnister, Allan O. – 1984
The historical development of the liberal arts college in the United States and its status in the 1980s are discussed. Although for nearly 300 years, liberal arts colleges have been a dominant force in North American higher education, in the 1980s they have come to constitute a small and decreasing portion of postsecondary education. The position…
Descriptors: College Curriculum, College Role, Educational Change, Educational History
Lindauer, Owen; Ferguson, Deborah; Glass, Margaret; Hatfield, Virginia; McKenna, Jeanette A.; Dering, Phil – 1996
The Phoenix Indian School served as a coeducational, federal educational institution for American Indian primary and secondary students between 1891 and 1990. Covering 10 blocks and enrolling over 600 Indian children aged 8-18, this boarding school used education to assimilate students into Anglo-American culture. This monograph describes…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indian History
Thomas, Joy – 1972
Since the early nineteenth century, scholars have marveled at the unlettered Cherokee native named Sequoyah--or Sikwaya--and also known as John Guess--or Guest or Gist--who, unassisted, developed a medium for the written expression of the Cherokee language that was uniquely appropriate to the peculiarities of the spoken language. There is much…
Descriptors: Alphabets, American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indians
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Trahant, Mark N. – 1995
Many American Indians deeply resent distorted depictions of themselves in the media. They are convinced that false media caricatures have helped rob them of their history. This report addresses a fascinating incongruity: the contributions made by Native Americans to the U.S. news media--a media that has played a key role in creating the flawed…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indian History, American Indians, Broadcast Journalism