09/17/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/17/2024 07:51
The Two-Eyed Seeing approach uses one eye to understand the strengths of Indigenous knowledge and the other to understand Western knowledge, then melds those perspectives together for mutual benefit.
Bardwell serves as a co-principal investigator for the project with Dawn Rutecki, assistant professor of interdisciplinary studies, and Steven Dorland, assistant professor of anthropology. Dorland incorporated the Two-Eyed Seeing method into an archaeological field schoollast year after collaborating with Native partners.
Money from the Native American Heritage Fund grant will support hiring a part-time project coordinator, training for faculty and creating and supporting a community of Indigenous knowledge keepers.
Mark Schaub, dean of the Brooks College of Interdisciplinary Studies, said while the work for the grant will be housed within the college, support for the project is spread throughout Grand Valley and includes University Libraries, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Pew Faculty Teaching and Learning Center, and others.
"We are honored that the Native American Heritage Fund has entrusted Grand Valley and Brooks College with this work," Schaub said. "There is a commitment across campus to uplift Indigenous knowledge and to shift conversations in the classroom to better understand Native culture."