Hi everyone,
I am a non-Native high school science teacher and work in a city-wide program for Indigenous students. Many students in the program are Ojibwe or Dakota, but there are also members of other Indigenous groups from across the US, Canada, Mexico, and Guatemala. I am doing my best to make the curriculum and instruction culturally responsive for my students. I have three questions:
1 Our district encourages integration of some spiritual practices in the classroom and I am curious about how people in this forum would feel about a non-Native doing these things. It feels like it could be cultural appropriation to me.
-Starting class by smudging, teaching students to smudge who have not been exposed to this practice at home
Is it most appropriate to have students lead this? Should I be participating in this? Is this actually part of all North American Native cultures? Or would this not be appropriate for students from some Nations?
-Making tobacco offerings when taking students on a sacred sites tour
Again, should this be student-led? Should I participate? Is this actually part of all North American Native cultures? I have heard some cultures offer cornmeal, but if we are visiting Dakota sacred sites, should they follow Dakota custom and offer tobacco?
-Teaching students the Seven Grandfather Teachings
Where did these come from? I am not sure these are even traditional to Ojibwe culture since the district said they had them translated. Are they originally Dakota? I feel uncomfortable teaching this as a pan-Indian thing if it is actually culturally specific.
2. I am also struggling with the content of the classes. I want the students to explore both Western and Native science, but don't want to introduce content (especially sacred or seasonal content) that it is not appropriate for me to talk about. I can be a learner alongside my students, but not a cultural mentor. I am wondering about sharing information from books like
Plants Have So Much To Teach Us .
https://www.amazon.com/Plants-Have-Much-Give-All/dp/0816696764That book includes many stories related to the plants that are part of the Anishinaabe science of those plants, and some include spiritual content. I am wondering if I should only use the text to present the information, not include this type of information at all, or try to find someone from the community to share similar information with students? I don't have any illusion that I understand enough to teach that content myself (only an elder with that firsthand cultural knowledge could do that), but I think it is important that students know it is out there so they can seek out those elders in their communities and continue passing that knowledge to future generations.
3. Due to family experiences with boarding schools and ongoing genocide, many Native students don't know their own spiritual traditions, and some of them end up getting information from plastic shaman websites, or taking on practices from a different Native culture (eg. a Navajo or Pipil student taking on Lakota spiritual practices and beliefs). How can I help educate students about plastic shamans and that they prey on Native people as well, not just white new agers? Are there any videos or articles targeted to Native youth on this topic?
I have learned a lot from reading posts here and am very grateful for any advice or resources you can share.