Native American History For Kids (original) (raw)
Meet spirit guides and storytellers. Learn about table manners, village life, battle techniques, the 3 sisters, the snow snake games, secret messages, the naming ceremony, the arrowmaker, and the butterfly game. Enter the darkening land. Solve symbol stories. Meet clever coyote, a pushy owl, and a very bad raven. Find out why baskets were so important, why rabbit never got his claws, and more!
Explore the Iroquois, the Navajo, the Apache, the Hopi, the Sioux, the Cherokee, the Lenape, the Ojibwa/Chippewa, the Seminoles, the Anasazi, the Pueblo, the Pacific Coastal Indians and other principal tribes. Welcome to Native Americans in olden times. It all started 40,000 years ago!
For Teachers:
Free Use Lesson Plans for Teachers
Free Use Classroom Activity Ideas
Today, neat frame houses have replaced former wigwams and tepees. Native Americans today have a variety of jobs, including doctors, lawyers, engineers, teachers, ministers, writers, artists, and workers of all sorts. But they also hold jobs like tribal leaders. Tribes are ruled by representative tribal governments. Although kids attend public school, they also attend tribal school, where they learn the fascinating and clever customs of their people, some of which are still in practice today.
Our thanks to the many people who helped us with this site.
This site could not have been written without the many Native American people from many tribes and nations across the USA, who, although they did not want their names to be listed, generously shared information with us about their tribal history, customs, myths, and culture. We are most grateful for their help.
Thanks to several professors throughout our site, such as Dr. Peter Bakker (alf.let.uva.nl) who helped us to understand why Native Americans, unlike other ancient cultures, did not use proverbs. They usedother ways to teach their children.
Dr. Adams. Over the years, Dr. Adams has been a consultant to the Sioux, Winnebago, Fox, and other tribes in the Midwest on community development. He also participated in a federal project for communication and values differences among cultures, resulting in a website - a multicultural toolkit
Washington State History Museum, Tacoma, WA, for our private tour, with a research opportunity to learn more.
Books we used - This link takes you to the list of books we used.
A frequently asked question: What is the correct terminology: American Indian, Indian, Native American, First People, Native? The answer from theNational Museum of the American Indian at the Smithsonian is: "All of these terms are acceptable. The consensus, however, is that whenever possible, Native people prefer to be called by their specific tribal name."