-Ojibwe curriculum k-12
-Language tables
-Public Awareness through city signage in Ojibwe
-Transfer of recordings of elder Ojibwe speakers from cassette to CD (35)
1. Develop a standardized assessment tool with fall, winter, and spring CBM (curriculum based measures) math assessments in Dakota and Ojibwe for students in grades K-8. 2. Be able to report to our authorizer the actual learning of math that occurs at our school as is assessed in Dakota and Ojibwe. 3. Be able to report to our authorizer the actual learning of math that occurs at our school as is assessed in Dakota and Ojibwe. 4. Develop an immersion focused scope and sequence for math for Ojibwe and Dakota classrooms.
1. Develop a standardized assessment tool with fall, winter, and spring CBM (curriculum based measures) math assessments in Dakota and Ojibwe for students in grades K-8. 2. Be able to report to our authorizer the actual learning of math that occurs at our school as is assessed in Dakota and Ojibwe. 3. Be able to report to our authorizer the actual learning of math that occurs at our school as is assessed in Dakota and Ojibwe. 4. Develop an immersion focused scope and sequence for math for Ojibwe and Dakota classrooms.
Artistry is seeking support to expand our partnerships with indigenous artists and to provide more programming on indigenous arts and culture. Our main goals are: 1) To provide exceptional arts education opportunities to Bloomington students and community members. 2) To bring the region's best indigenous artists to Artistry to offer masterclasses and other public art education programs. The pursuit of both of these goals will broadly help grow the cultural literacy of our area.
This project is supporting programming expansion in the Indigenous Food Lab, located in Minneapolis, which includes a professional Indigenous kitchen. In June the organization will open a demonstration and training studio, Spirit Kitchen, offering fresh food. It will also offer Indigenous market curated retail products from Indigenous producers. This program will design one meal kit per month (15 months), to distribute at two schools (30 families each), to families of Indigenous students, with an accompanying live demonstration and video on how families can prepare meals together.
Great Lakes Lifeways Institute will expand and deepen their work, launching a series of seasonal, traditional harvest camps that are designed to initiate a long-term elder/youth apprenticeship program. The project includes five harvest camps each year, over two years, with the support of community partners, as well as smaller cultural gatherings around specific knowledge and traditional ways.