PRESERVATION THROUGH PRINT: Preserving Tribal Histories through Affordable Self-Publishing Projects
The Ute Indian Museum of Montrose, Colorado is pleased to announce a one-day workshop, Preservation through Print, on Saturday, September 13th from 9:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Preservation through Print, an interactive program teaching indigenous educators and leaders how to preserve tribal histories through self-publishing projects. Educators and tribal leaders will learn how to create curriculum that is structured around tribal customs, traditions, and history. Participants will learn how to assess their concepts and turn them into viable affordable book projects and materials that can be used to help indigenous children understand their past, present, and future through a variety of hands-on activities, including language.
Workshop facilitator, Vickie Leigh Krudwig, has presented Preservation through Print to tribes at the National Indian Education Association on numerous occasions and to several tribes in Oklahoma. She is also currently working with the Southern Cheyenne and Southern Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma in helping tribal educators and cultural experts on developing language and culture-based materials for children in the Southern Cheyenne and Southern Arapaho tribes. Krudwig has been hired by Oklahoma University to create educational materials for the Deep Dust Project in Oklahoma, featuring prehistoric times through presentation, while highlighting indigenous geoscientists and their role in the sciences.
Krudwig was also a contributor to the Fourth Grade Ute Resource Guide, Nuu-Ciu Strong, featuring lessons about Ute history. She is author of Searching for Chipeta: The Story of a Ute and Her People, and Walking with Chipeta: A 179 Year Journey through Chipeta’s World to Mine. The workshop is $25.00 for all participants. All Materials are provided. Reservations may be made through the Ute Indian Museum by calling (970) 249-3098 or online . Her artwork can be seen hanging in the Ute Indian Museum. Commissions are donated to the Friends of the Ute to support educational and cultural programming.
The Ute Indian Museum of Montrose, Colorado is pleased to announce a one-day workshop, Preservation through Print, on Saturday, September 13th from 9:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Preservation through Print, an interactive program teaching indigenous educators and leaders how to preserve tribal histories through self-publishing projects. Educators and tribal leaders will learn how to create curriculum that is structured around tribal customs, traditions, and history. Participants will learn how to assess their concepts and turn them into viable affordable book projects and materials that can be used to help indigenous children understand their past, present, and future through a variety of hands-on activities, including language.
Workshop facilitator, Vickie Leigh Krudwig, has presented Preservation through Print to tribes at the National Indian Education Association on numerous occasions and to several tribes in Oklahoma. She is also currently working with the Southern Cheyenne and Southern Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma in helping tribal educators and cultural experts on developing language and culture-based materials for children in the Southern Cheyenne and Southern Arapaho tribes. Krudwig has been hired by Oklahoma University to create educational materials for the Deep Dust Project in Oklahoma, featuring prehistoric times through presentation, while highlighting indigenous geoscientists and their role in the sciences.
Krudwig was also a contributor to the Fourth Grade Ute Resource Guide, Nuu-Ciu Strong, featuring lessons about Ute history. She is author of Searching for Chipeta: The Story of a Ute and Her People, and Walking with Chipeta: A 179 Year Journey through Chipeta’s World to Mine. The workshop is $25.00 for all participants. All Materials are provided. Reservations may be made through the Ute Indian Museum by calling (970) 249-3098 or online . Her artwork can be seen hanging in the Ute Indian Museum. Commissions are donated to the Friends of the Ute to support educational and cultural programming.
The Ute Indian Museum of Montrose, Colorado is pleased to announce a one-day workshop, Preservation through Print, on Saturday, September 13th from 9:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Preservation through Print, an interactive program teaching indigenous educators and leaders how to preserve tribal histories through self-publishing projects. Educators and tribal leaders will learn how to create curriculum that is structured around tribal customs, traditions, and history. Participants will learn how to assess their concepts and turn them into viable affordable book projects and materials that can be used to help indigenous children understand their past, present, and future through a variety of hands-on activities, including language.
Workshop facilitator, Vickie Leigh Krudwig, has presented Preservation through Print to tribes at the National Indian Education Association on numerous occasions and to several tribes in Oklahoma. She is also currently working with the Southern Cheyenne and Southern Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma in helping tribal educators and cultural experts on developing language and culture-based materials for children in the Southern Cheyenne and Southern Arapaho tribes. Krudwig has been hired by Oklahoma University to create educational materials for the Deep Dust Project in Oklahoma, featuring prehistoric times through presentation, while highlighting indigenous geoscientists and their role in the sciences.
Krudwig was also a contributor to the Fourth Grade Ute Resource Guide, Nuu-Ciu Strong, featuring lessons about Ute history. She is author of Searching for Chipeta: The Story of a Ute and Her People, and Walking with Chipeta: A 179 Year Journey through Chipeta’s World to Mine. The workshop is $25.00 for all participants. All Materials are provided. Reservations may be made through the Ute Indian Museum by calling (970) 249-3098 or online . Her artwork can be seen hanging in the Ute Indian Museum. Commissions are donated to the Friends of the Ute to support educational and cultural programming.