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K. Tsianina Lomawaima
(Creek; Ph.D., 1987, Stanford University)
joined the AIS faculty on a full time tenured Associate Professor appointment
in 1994, and was promoted to Full Professor in 1998. Her 1994 book,
They Called it Prairie Light: The Story of Chilocco
Indian School (U of Nebraska Press) received the 1993 North American
Indian Prose Award, the 1995 American Educational Association's Critics'
Choice Award, and was nominated for 2 other honors. She co-edited and
co-authored Away from Home: American Indian Boarding
School Experiences (Phoenix: Heard Museum, 2000); co-edited a
special issue of The Journal of American Indian
Education (Spring 1996 Vol. 35 #3) on boarding school experiences;
and co-edited a theme issue of Anthropology &
Education Quarterly on Indigenous Epistemoloigies and Education--Self-Determination,
Anthropology, and Human Rights (Vol. 36, #1, 2005). Uneven
Ground: American Indian Sovereignty and Federal Law, co-authored
with David E. Wilkins, was published by University of Oklahoma Press
in Fall, 2001, and issued in paperback summer, 2002. Professor Lomawaima
teaches a number of the graduate courses including AIS 502, Dynamics
of Indian Society; AIS 602, Interdisciplinary Research: Theory and Methods;
AIS
696C, Native Scholars: Intellectual Heritage of AIS; and AIS 697A,
College Teaching Methods. She developed AIS 677, History of Indian Education,
and is one of the faculty who teaches the 677-678-679 Education Series.
In addition, she provided leadership for the development of TRAD 101,
Many Nations of Native America, a Tier One General Education course
for freshmen. Professor Lomawaima is a member of various professional associations
in education, anthropology, and ethnohistory. She served as the
President of the American Society for Ethnohistory in 2005.
Her most recent book manuscript, co-authored with Prof. Teresa L. McCarty, To Remain an Indian: Lessons in Democracy
from a Century of Native American Education, was published
in 2006 by Teachers College Press, as part of the Multicultural Education series
edited by James Banks. Ongoing research projects include the research
survey team who produced the 1928 publication The
Problem of Indian Administration, commonly known as the Meriam
Report; 20th century transformations in Indian homes, in architecture
and in organization of domestic space, examining the impact of domestic
education programs in boarding schools and on-reservation programs (such
as field matron, agricultural extension, and “Better Home campaign”
activities); and federal production and uses of photographic images
to document and publicize programs to assimilate and “civilize”
Native peoples and communities.
Visit her personal web page at:
http://www.gened.arizona.edu/lomawaima/tsianina.htm .
K. Tsianina Lomawaima
Head & Interim Director, American Indian Studies 520-626-9772
lomawaim@email.arizona.edu FAX: 520-621-7952
American Indian Studies, Harvill 218, Box 210076, Univ. of Arizona,
Tucson, AZ 85721
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