Skip to main content

Indigenous course modules in development through partnerships


Pueblo Cohort image
|
December 21, 2015

In partnership with Indigenous-serving universities and Indigenous communities, the Justice and Social Inquiry Program (JSI) at the ASU School of Social Transformation is expanding its development of an Indigenous course modules concept.

Initial development began during the Pueblo Cohort Project, which called for the creation of innovative course content focused on Justice Studies and Indigenous peoples. Since then, an intensive and field-based course module design has grown through increased collaboration with tribal institutions and communities — based on JSI Indigenous faculty-driven work led by Dr. Elizabeth Sumida Huaman and Dr. Bryan Brayboy.  

“The School of Social Transformation has formed beautiful relationships with diverse Indigenous places and peoples around the world,” said Sumida Huaman. “We are very proud of these connections as we are able to learn from Indigenous communities and institutions, share what we know and are interested in, maintain dialogue and build lasting relationships with community members, students and scholars/researchers.”

Module sites include community-based field experience opportunities for JSI students, and each module is themed according to particular Indigenous issues. Moreover, all course assignments require students to link their current work and research interests with what they have learned, ensuring direct application of classroom and real-world knowledge towards shared solutions. 

Modules include: Indigenous healthy families and communities in partnership with McGill University and Kahnawake Mohawk Territory; Indigenous law and governance with the Sami Centre, University of the Arctic (UiT), Tromsø, Norway and Coastal Sami; Indigenous community-based research with the University of Waikato, New Zealand and Māori peoples; and Indigenous research and sovereignty with the Universities of Hawai’i, Manoa and Hilo, and Kamehameha Schools. 

Upcoming modules include Indigenous education with Salish Kootenai College in Montana, and Indigenous lands and globalization with Quechua institutions and communities in Huancayo and Cusco, Peru.  

More University news

 

Portrait of Kaye Reed in an outdoor setting

ASU professor named AAAS Fellow

The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the world’s largest general scientific society and publisher of…

April 18, 2024
Four police officers stand raising their right hands in front of a seated audience.

ASU Police Department announces new assistant chief of police, promotions

Arizona State University Police Chief Michael Thompson announced the promotion of four veteran ASU Police Department officers…

April 17, 2024
A woman smiling with arms crossed and a desert landscape in the background.

ASU student wins Truman Scholarship to pursue public service career

An Arizona State University student who has spent years in service to her Mesa, Arizona, community has been named a Truman…

April 12, 2024