BOSTONandDENVER,Jan. 10, 2023/PRNewswire/ -- In many Indigenous cultures, winter is the season of storytelling: to educate, to remember, and to share with the next generations. Honoring traditional cultural cycles in our practices, theIndigenous Early Learning Collaborative(IELC), led byFirst Light Education Project(Denver, CO) andBrazelton Touchpoints Center(BTC) (Boston, MA), is telling its story in this winter season, through creation of a project website, publication of written reports, and the release of a documentary film.
OnJanuary 24at3 PM Mountain Time,IELC will premiere the film,Indigenous Early Learning Collaborative: Advancing Community-Based Inquiry and Equitable Early Learning Opportunities for Native Children & Families, in which the IELC communities share their stories of implementing Community-Based Inquiry (CBI). Register for the premiere at the IELC website:
https://www.brazeltontouchpoints.org/programs-services/indigenous-early-learning/
Visitors to the IELC website can learn about IELC's work in various forms: theIELC 2021-2022 Annual Report,2022 Co-learning Evaluation Report, and twoProject Briefsreleased during this storytelling season. Additionally, in 2023, each of the four communities will share their stories of Community-Based Inquiry in a special issue of theAmerican Indian Culture and Research Journal.
The IELC is a national initiative designed for Indigenous communities to strengthen early childhood education by generating their own critical questions and constructing local, relevant, and sustainable solutions. Community members are the researchers, using CBI to ask questions, develop methodologies, analyze data, and take immediate action to address issues of importance in early childhood education.
The initial four IELC communities are, from east to west:
- Wiikwedong Early Childhood Development Collaborative (L'Anse, MI)
- Wicoie Nandagikendan Immersion Program (Minneapolis, MN)
- Daybreak Star Preschool (Seattle, WA)
- Keiki Steps (The Institute for Native Pacific Education and Culture, Hawai'i)
"At the heart of the work of the IELC is the importance of relationships. It's all about the communities — who they are and exactly where they are," says Dr.Joshua Sparrow, Executive Director ofBTC.
Dr. Tarajean Yazzie-Mintz, Founder and Principal Consultant ofFirst Light Education Projectand Director of theIELC, articulates the powerful impact of this work: "What we have seen across these sites are educators finally realizing that they have the power in their hands to change the world."
To learn more about theIELC, or to schedule an interview with Drs. Yazzie-Mintz or Sparrow, contact Dr.Ethan Yazzie-Mintz, Executive Director ofFirst Light Education Project(phone: 617-548-0908; e-mail:[email protected]).
SOURCE Brazelton Touchpoints Center
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