Through Tribal Eyes: Change on the Menominee Nation
United States Climate Resilience Toolkit
In this video, members of the Menominee nation discuss their experiences with climate change.
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The CLEAN collection is hand-picked and rigorously reviewed for scientific accuracy and classroom effectiveness. Read what our review team had to say about this resource below or learn more about how CLEAN reviews teaching materials.
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Teachers may want to create a viewing guide and/or guiding questions for a discussion after viewing, develop a lesson plan, and/or identify where in the curriculum the video should be integrated. Educators may find this suitable as an introduction/overview to climate change and diverse perspectives. The use of this resource could be strengthened by having students (individually or in groups) delve deeper into the questions asked in the video (importance of forest, water, etc.) for themselves (or interview their adults at home with these same questions) and possibly other Indigenous Nations (especially those local to your students). Educators may find that this video may pair well with the climate story activity from the [link https://cleanet.org/resources/58955.html 'Your Place in Focus activity'] (CLEAN ID 58955). This is a good video for including diverse voices on climate change. Teachers should be prepared to address Indigenous stereotypes. Many quality resources on how to respectfully incorporate Indigenous voices/knowledge into the classroom are available with a quick google search. Here's one: [link https://www.burkemuseum.org/education/learning-resources/tips-teaching-about-native-peoples] There is an article linked below the video that may serve as supplementary information for the students: [link https://toolkit.climate.gov/case-studies/college-menominee-nations-sustainable-development-institute-builds-capacity-tribal]