Seattle Public Schools

Departments

American Indian Studies

American Indian Studies

Wear Orange on Monday, September 30, 2024

By wearing an orange shirt on September 30th, you commit to the enduring truth that EVERY CHILD MATTERS, every day and everywhere.  – Orange Shirt Society

The 2024 Every Child Matters Logo, which depicts a First Nations child with angel wings.

Though Orange Shirt Day is a Canadian observance, Seattle Public Schools recognizes Orange Shirt Day, because every child matters. We invite you to join in the healing.

On this day of September 30th, we call upon humanity to listen with open ears to the stories of survivors and their families, and to remember those that didn’t make it. -Orange Shirt Society

Learn more about Canadian Residential Schools and the Orange Shirt Society.

Learn more about the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition.

American Indian is the legal term for the federally recognized tribes that reside within the U.S. Unlike other American ethnic groups, federally recognized tribes and nations engage in “government-to-government relationships” with federal, state, and local governments.

American Indians are not ethnic groups

Unlike Asian Americans, African Americans, and Latinx communities, we are in treaty relationships with the United States. This treaty relationship alone necessitates a clearer distinction. This also helps explain why American Indians had such different needs during the civil rights era — we sought a measure of separation from the US mainstream political culture, not assimilation relative to exercising the civil liberties of this nation. – Dr. Joshua Reid (University of Washington, History, American Indian Studies)
…American Indians do not form an ethnic group, they are composed of thousands of independent nations, communities, and cultures that have very different and specific identities.
Indian country is more like the multitude of nations that form the United Nations than a shared ethnicity. The concept of ethnicity oversimplifies American Indian identities and homogenizes the cultural, political, and diversity of American Indian identities.
-Champagne, Duane. “The Term ‘American Indian,’ Plus Ethnicity, Sovereignty, and Identity.” IndianCountryToday.com, Indian Country Today, 16 June 2014.

Land Acknowledgment

SPS land acknowledgment in Southern Lushootseed: "We would like to acknowledge that we are on the ancestral lands and traditional territories of the Puget Sound Coast Salish People."
SPS land acknowledgment in Southern Lushootseed

Muckleshoot Indian Tribe is our treaty tribe in Seattle and King County. Suquamish Indian Tribe is our treaty tribe up to Elliott Bay boundaries. Seattle Public Schools shares a government-to-government relationship with both tribes.

We would like to acknowledge that we are on the ancestral lands and traditional territories of the Puget Sound Coast Salish People.

This land acknowledgment gifted to SPS by Nancy Jo Bob, Southern Lushootseed language bearer Duwamish and Lummi Citizen
Salmon Homecoming boats lined up at the shore in downtown Seattle
Photo courtesy of John Loftus

Since Time Immemorial: Tribal Sovereignty in Washington State

All K – 12 Seattle Public School social studies teachers are required to teach Since Time Immemorial: Tribal Sovereignty in Washington State (STI) at every grade, K – 12 and implement in their classrooms according to district policies: 

Since Time Immemorial logo

Modifications & Required State Collaboration

School districts shall collaborate with OSPI on curricular areas regarding tribal government and history that are statewide in nature, such as the concept of tribal sovereignty and the history of federal policy towards federally recognized Indian tribes.

For SPS Staff

All curriculum for Since Time Immemorial, district and state requirements for teaching STI, enrichment resources, and registration for upcoming professional development can be found in our American Indian Studies Schoology Course (login required)

Public Resources

Other Resources: