Schedule
Program participants can expect busy but rewarding days. Below is a schedule for both the virtual and in-person weeks.
Week 1 (online): July 7-10, 2025 Accordion Closed
Zoom sessions will take place from 9am-1pm MT/12pm-4pm EST.
Day | Facilitator(s) | Session Title and Description |
Monday | Project Co-Directors: Dr. Darold Joseph
Dr. Marcus Macktima Dr. Eric Meeks Dr. Lauren Lefty |
Opening Session: Indigenous Histories of the U.S. Mexico Borderlands
In this opening zoom session, the project co-directors will introduce themselves and set the groundwork for the Institute. Space will be made for a land acknowledgement (and discussion of such statements), an overview of the Institute’s goals, essential questions, schedule, community contract building, and a get-to-know-you activity. During this session, teachers will also have the opportunity to discuss the Week 1 pre-reading in large and small groups, based on Ned Blackhawk’s book Rediscovering America: Native Peoples and the Unmaking of U.S. History. |
Tuesday | Dr. Darold Joseph | Laying the Groundwork: Culturally Sustaining and Responsive Orientations of Indigenous Pedagogies
The Institute for Native-serving Educators (INE) is a collaborative initiative to strengthen schools across Indian Country. Housed in NAU’s Office of Native American Initiatives, existing partnerships with Native Nations, Indigenous-serving schools, and public school districts on and bordering Indigenous homelands. Dr. Joseph will engage participants with the foundational principles of culturally sustaining and responsive pedagogies to address educational inequities impacting Indigenous youth and communities. Participants will be encouraged to examine emic socio-cultural and socio-political contexts to further understand the relationality of their experiences in education with the experiences of education by Indigenous students and communities. |
Wednesday | Dr. Vangee Nez | Navajo Epistemology: Using Sa’ah Naaghai Bik’eh Hozhoon (SNBH) as an Educational Tool
Sa’ah Naaghai Bik’eh Hozhoon (SNBH) is the foundation of Diné (Navajo) philosophy that has been passed down through many generations of Diné people. In this session, Dr. Vangee Nez will share what SNBH is and how it can be used by teachers and researchers to cultivate a culturally responsive and sustaining classroom space. The SNBH paradigm is particularly significant to the lives of Diné youth because SNBH provides a foundation to illuminate or share knowledge to reclaim Diné ways of knowing, and reclaim the stories to formulate a balanced mind, body, and spirit. Dr. Nez will share insights from her research and work with Indigenous educators to help participants to cultivate the right epistemological framework for teaching the Indigenous histories participants will explore in the rest of the Institute. |
Thursday | Dr. Alisse Ali-Joseph | Indigenous Sovereignty, Education and Federal Indian Law/Policy
Indigenous communities within the United States are sovereign Nations. In this session Dr. Alisse Ali-Joseph will lead participants through historical and contemporary experiences of Indigenous Nations and Indigenous Peoples’ sovereignty, self-determination, and distinct political status through an overview of Federal Indian Policy. This session will engage in conversation about the application of these experiences and policies into social studies education, for, with and by Indigenous communities. |
Week 2 (NAU Mountain Campus, Flagstaff, Arizona): July 21-26, 2025 Accordion Closed
Sessions will take place between 9am and 5pm MT. This schedule will include content sessions, meals, breaks, reflection, and curriculum planning time. A more detailed schedule will be given to participants in advance of the in-person week.
Day | Facilitator(s) | Session Title and Description |
Monday
(Morning) |
Project Co-Directors: Dr. Darold Joseph
Dr. Marcus Macktima Dr. Eric Meeks Dr. Lauren Lefty |
Welcome to Flagstaff! Opening In-Person Session: Indigenous Histories of the U.S. Mexico Borderlands
In this opening session for our in-person week, the project co-directors will re-introduce themselves in person and set the groundwork for the second week of the Institute. Space will be made for a land acknowledgement, review of the Institute’s goals and schedule, and a welcome to the Native American Cultural Center and NAU campus. |
Monday
(Morning) |
Dr. Eric Meeks | Indigenous Borderlands History: An Introduction
Co-Director Dr. Eric Meeks is a leading historian of the U.S. Mexico borderlands. He will provide an introduction to the field of Indigenous borderlands history, defining what we mean by a borderland and discussing key contributions of the field. During the session, participants will engage with maps and select primary sources to illustrate these ideas. After laying this groundwork, Dr. Meeks will guide teachers more deeply into the subject through case studies of specific Indigenous communities, such as the Yaquis and Tohono O’odham, whose populations live on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border. The session will challenge notions of Native Americans as a monolith and instead offer rich detail about specific communities through time and place. |
Monday
(Afternoon) |
Co-Directors | Field Trip: Sunset Crater and Wupatki National Monuments
Educators will be taken on a trip to Sunset Crater and Wupatki national monuments, about a 30-minute drive from Flagstaff. Led by a National Parks Service public historian, the visit will discuss how a volcano that erupted around 900 years ago led to the migration and innovative adaptation of Puebloan communities to nearby Wupatki, where they developed new settlements and agricultural techniques in the 1100s. Currently, Wupatki is home to over 2,600 ancestral Puebloan sites, including dwellings, the northernmost ball court in North America, and sites of trade and diplomacy. This session will expose participants to the rich cultural history of the region while adding insight into Indigenous life pre-contact. |
Tuesday
(Morning) |
Dr. Jeffrey Shepherd | We Are an Indian Nation: A History of the Hualapai People
During this session, Dr. Shepherd will present an overview of Hualapai history through the lens of three themes: land and belonging; gender and tribal leadership; and tourism and tribal sovereignty. The first theme will focus on the era between 1883 and the passage of the Indian Reorganization Act in 1934, and the very unusual trajectory of tribal members refusing to live on the newly created reservation because it did not encompass the territories of most band members. The second theme, gender and tribal leadership, focuses on the exceptional trend, starting in 1951, of women serving on the Tribal Council and as Tribal Chairpersons. Long before the postwar Women’s Movement, Hualapai women held elected positions in tribal government. And finally, the third theme focuses on the construction of the Hualapai Skywalk in the 21st century, on the west end of the reservation and on the rim of the Grand Canyon. This project confounded Indian Affairs’ experts, worried the Department of the Interior, and raised important questions about economic development, but it ultimately demonstrated the directions and possibilities of tribal sovereignty. |
Tuesday
(Afternoon) |
Dr. Lauren Lefty | Field Trip: Museum of Northern Arizona
Partnering with Museums and Archival Collections to Create Inquiry-driven and Decolonial Lessons on Indigenous History Archives and museums can function as powerful teaching tools. Dr. Lefty will discuss how institutional collections often reflect gaps, silences, and power dynamics in the historical record, but also invite students to critically engage with often unrecognized voices and histories. To do so, teachers will engage in an inquiry-driven exploration of the exhibit “Native Peoples of the Colorado Plateau,” the result of an innovative partnership between museum curators and forty-two tribal members from the region. Presented in their own words, the ethnology exhibition recounts tribal histories, values, and cultures of ten tribes of the Colorado Plateau, including the Acoma, Dilzhe’e Apache, Diné, Havasupai, Hopi, Hualapai, Southern Paiute, Southern Ute, Yavapai, and Zuni. While learning significant content, teachers will also acquire skills for using archival and museum collections to help center Native voices, move beyond outdated stereotypes, and develop key historical thinking skills in their students. Teachers will conclude the day with reflection time to digest their learning. |
Wednesday
(All Day) |
Dr. Maurice Crandall | Day Trip: Yavapai and Dilzhe’e Apache History in the Verde Valley
This day trip will bring participants from Flagstaff south to the Verde Valley. The Verde Valley, so named for the Verde River that flows through it, is the most fertile region of Arizona, and more importantly, the homeland of Yavapais and Dilzhe’e Apaches. Dr. Crandall will discuss how his community faced successive waves of exploitation of the land and its resources. This day trip will highlight the long Indigenous history of the area, taking participants to ancestral sites such as Montezuma Well (the Yavapai-Dilzhe Place of Emergence from the Underworld into their current existence) and Boynton Canyon (the place where the first woman, Kamalapukwia, came to live after the world flooded). Teachers will also visit sites of violence and conflict, such as Fort Verde State Park, from which General George Crook pursued his military campaigns in the 1870s. Most importantly, the trip will take the group to the Yavapai-Apache Cultural Resource Center, where we will learn from tribal elders, highlighting the Verde Valley’s long history as an Indigenous borderland, where settlers, the military, resource extraction companies, and the Sedona tourism industry have all sought in various ways to displace and dispossess Yavapais and Dilzhe’es, who have, in turn, adopted strategies to persist and retain a portion of their ancestral homelands and live as borderlands peoples. |
Thursday
(Morning) |
Dr. James Mestaz | Strength from the Waters: Indigenous Water Activism in the US-Mexico Borderlands
This session will focus on Indigenous water rights in the Southwest and Northern Mexico, beginning in the period of the first major reclamation projects–the late nineteenth and early twentieth century–and ending with some of the agreements and unsatisfied claims of recent decades. Dr. James Mestaz will begin with a broad overview of some of the most oppressive laws in both Mexico and the U.S. in the late 19th century, and then look at the Winters Doctrine and of usurpation of Indigenous water rights in the early 20th century. He will then zero in on specific examples such as the Mayo of Sonora and Sinaloa, Yaqui of Sonora, and Akimel O’odham of Arizona. This will provide a deeper, more intimate understanding, focusing in on Indigenous claims, activism, and Indigenous rituals. Class participation, discussion, and engagement will be a major focus of this session. |
Thursday
(Afternoon) |
Dr. Marcus Maktima | Corrupting Identities: Government Interventions and Development of Arizona Apachean Identities of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
Co-Director Dr. Marcus Macktima will present on his research related to the San Carlos Apache nation in central Arizona, of which he is a tribal member. The session will also draw on his experience as an instructor for the Apache History course at the San Carlos Apache College. A gap in the historiography, related specifically to the Apachean peoples, is represented by the lack of information available concerning the peoples of Arizona in the aftermath of the Apache Wars of the nineteenth century. Moreover, much of the larger literature reflects solely on the history and culture of the Chiricahua Apachean peoples, though more recent work has highlighted Western Apachean peoples. As he will demonstrate, an understanding of the diversity of identities in Arizona during the twentieth century is necessary to comprehend the impact of the developing state on the Apachean peoples, post-Apache Wars. These communities do not act as static bystanders watching the state grow into a political power, but are active participants and possess moments where they engage with the system that attempted to eradicate their presence within the boundaries of Arizona Territory. During the session, participants will be exposed to another key example of an Indigenous tribe’s political confrontation with a developing state in the borderlands region. |
Friday
(Morning) |
Dr. Anabel Galindo | Day Trip: Tuba City
Food as Resilience: Indigenous Foodways in the Borderlands History is not only written in books, but understanding Indigenous history can be done through the foods we eat, the knowledge of the landscape, the language use to call specific places, foods, and plants. It is also in the knowledge of how to prepare a meal for sustenance, for travel or medicine. Understanding our history through foods is an act of resilience. In this session, Dr. Anabel Galindo will reveal how food has played an integral part in the unfolding of historical processes from the encounter period, the wars, the changes to the landscape and our foods, but also the resilience of culture and traditions. We will conclude with a discussion about the current efforts to cultivate and share the importance of food as part of our identity and the history of the borderlands. This session will take place in Tuba City on the Navajo Nation. |
Friday
(Afternoon) |
Dr. Darold Joseph | Day Trip: Tuba City
Interconnected and Interrelated Ways of Knowing and Being Panel Session Dr. Joseph will lead a panel of Tribal leaders in education to engage in conversation to discuss their reflections on the meaning of Indigenous-serving education and the importance of nation-building in their communities, and the unique borderlands they navigate. |
Saturday
(Morning) |
All Co-Directors and
K-12 Specialists |
Closing Celebration and Reflection of Learning
On Saturday morning, the final day of the institute, participants will reflect on and celebrate their learning. Space will be made to discuss key ideas and questions in large and small groups, spend time in individual reflection through a journaling activity, and consider how participants will adapt their teaching practice to honor the histories, stories, and ways of knowing of Indigenous communities. During this final day, Co-Directors and the K-12 specialist will also provide clear instructions for the institute’s culminating project: creating a unit plan teachers will use in their classroom, to be presented at the INE Showcase in December 2025. The unit plan model will be adapted from the INE template used in the Diné Institute for Navajo Nation Educators and the Teacher Leadership Shiłgozhóó Institute. This will require teachers to design a unit that incorporates content from the institute and make adaptations to meet the educator’s local context. |