Seven Directions’ Indigenous Evaluation Toolkit Training

Description

While Indigenous evaluation approaches have been documented for use in educational settings, for violence prevention, for youth well-being, and for other Indigenous public health outcomes, there hasn’t been an actionable guide for implementing Indigenous evaluation approaches. To help you apply Indigenous evaluation approaches, this training translates Indigenous values and knowledge into a cyclical learning process with actionable steps that teams can work through at their own pace.

Categories: Resource
7D Co-Authors :
Author : External
Link to Resource : https://www.nwcphp.org/training/seven-directions-indigenous-evaluation-toolkit-training
Resource year : 2024
Reference :
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Seven Directions' logo. Geometric design with colored arrows and diamonds in green, yellow, black, gray, blue, and brown.

Details

Published By:

External

Category:

Indigenous Evaluation

Type:

Training

Link to Resource:

7D Co-Authors

Seven Directions' logo. Geometric design with colored arrows and diamonds in green, yellow, black, gray, blue, and brown.

About Our Practice

The Seven Sacred Directions

Seven Directions was born from a desire to create greater connectivity across the many tribes, communities and organizations that have the health and wellness of American Indian and Alaska Native people at the heart of what they do. We are guided by the “seven directions” of practice: Integration & Holistic Wellness, Culture & Identity, Families & Communities, Respect for Sovereignty, Service, Indigenous Knowledge, and Tribal Governance.

The Seven Sacred Directions serve as an indigenous framework for presenting the strategic directions for the public health agenda.

Glen Oaks, NY, USA - July 26, 2014: Two Native American female girl dancers at annual pow-wow at Queens County Farm Museum.