The Native Pathways Program promotes life-long indigenous scholarship by placing value on cultural and traditional ways of knowing, working with indigenous research methodologies and expanding indigeneity through academia. This is an academically rigorous 12-credit program that provides opportunities to learn through western and indigenous pedagogy, while maintaining and promoting an indigenous worldview.
Locations and Schedule
- Evergreen Olympia Campus
Tuesday/Thursday 6 pm – 9:30 pm - Evergreen Tacoma Campus
Monday/Wednesday 6 pm – 9:30 pm - Salish Sea Hybrid
Canvas on-line classroom w/ designated meet times - Quinault (TANF in Hoquiam Taholah)
Monday/Thursday 5 pm – 8:30 pm - Peninsula (PCC Longhouse, Port Angeles)
Tuesday/Thursday 5:30 pm – 9 pm
All sites meet three weekends per quarter at Evergreen's House of Welcome on the Olympia Campus. Gatherings begin at 10 am on Saturdays and end at 4 pm on Sundays. Campus housing is available for the gatherings for registered students.
Eligibility
Interested students should contact Dawn Barron, Director at barrond@evergreen.edu for more information or to register for the upper-division program.
For students with under 90 credits, contact Dawn to find out about our affiliated courses that are open to students at all levels.
Curriculum
The core 12-credit curriculum is designed to expand knowledge and skills in research, rhetoric, writing, critical thinking, service-learning and community leadership through an indigenous lens. We believe students are best served by a well-defined consistent program that balances relationality, personal authority, indigenous knowledge and academics.
- Relationality emphasizes the balance of indigenous relationships (kinship, cultural, community) with academics. By utilizing this, students remain full-circle.
- Personal authority challenges students to be personally accountable for their attendance, engagement and learning and to declare the nature of their own work.
- Indigenous knowledge honors the founding principles of the program and its commitment to involving our community’s keepers of cultural and traditional knowledge as teachers and valuable human resources.
- Academics give breadth within the liberal arts through reading, writing, research and other scholarly pursuits that complement personal authority and indigenous knowledge.
Credit Equivalencies
- Native and Indigenous studies
- History
- Literature
- Communication
- Political science
- Art
- Sociology
- Writing
- Research
- Environmental sustainability
You can also choose areas of emphasis that match your academic and career goals. Students can earn a bachelor of art degree that prepares them to enter fields such as social services, public service, tribal governance or continue onto graduate school.