| DO present Native peoples as
appropriate role models with whom a Native child can identify. DO look for books and materials written and illustrated by Native people. DO avoid arts and crafts and activities that trivialize Native dress, dance, or ceremony. DO make sure you know the history of Native peoples, past and present, before you attempt to teach it. DO present Native peoples as separate from each other, with unique cultures, languages, spiritual beliefs, and dress. DO teach Native history as a regular part of American history. DO use materials which put history in perspective. DO use materials which present Native heros who fought to defend their own people. DO discuss the relationship between Native peoples and the colonists and what went wrong with it. DO use materials which show respect for, and understanding of, the sophistication and complexities of Native societies. DO use materials which show the continuity of Native societies, with traditional values and spiritual beliefs connected to the present. DO use respectful language in teaching about Native peoples. DO portray Native societies as coexisting with nature in a delicate balance. DO use primary source material-speeches, songs, poems, writings-that show the linguistic skill of peoples who come from an oral tradition. DO use materials which show Native women, Elders, and children as integral and important to Native societies. DO talk about the lives of Native peoples in the present. DO read and discuss good poetry, suitable for young people, by contemporary Native writers. DO invite Native community members to the classroom. DO offer them an honorarium. Treat them as teachers, not as entertainers. |
DON'T single out Native
children, ask them to describe their families' traditions, or their
people's cultures. DON'T assume that you have no Native children in your class. DON'T do or say anything that would embarrass a Native child. DON'T use ABC books that have "I is for Indian" or "E is for Eskimo." DON'T use counting books that count "Indians." DON'T use story books with characters like "Indian Two Feet" or "Little Chief." DON'T use books that show Native peoples as savages, primitive craftspeople, or simple tribal people, now extinct. DON'T have children dress up as "Indians," with paper-bag "costumes" or paper-feather "headdresses." DON'T sing "Ten Little Indians." DON'T let children do "war whoops." DON'T let children play with artifacts borrowed from a library or museum. DON'T have them make "Indian crafts" unless you know authentic methods and have authentic materials. DON'T teach "Indians" only at Thanksgiving. DON'T use materials which manipulate words like "victory," "conquest," or "massacre" to distort history. DON'T use materials which present as heroes only those Native people who aided Europeans. DON'T speak as though "the Indians" were here only for the benefit of the colonists. DON'T make charts about "gifts the Indians gave us." DON'T use materials that stress the superiority of European ways, and the inevitability of European conquest. DON'T refer to Native spirituality as "superstition." DON'T make up Indian "legends" or "ceremonies." DON'T encourage children to do "Indian" dances. DON'T use insulting terms such as "brave," "squaw," "papoose," "Indian givers," "wild Indians," "blanket Indians," or "wagon burners." DON'T portray Native peoples as "the first ecologists." DON'T use books in which "Indian" characters speak in either "early jawbreaker" or in the oratorical style of the "noble savage." DON'T use books which portray Native women and Elders as subservient to warriors. DON'T assume that every Native person knows everything there is to know about every Native Nation. |