Skip to content
RESOURCES:
  • 17th Century Abenaki Girl
  • Native American Heritage Month Writing Prompt
  • Gluscape Fights the Water Serpent and How Woodpecker Got His Red Head
  • Alnôbaiwi
  • Interview with Trudy Ann Parker
  • Nebizun: Water Is Life Curatorial Statement
  • Outdoor Education and Allyship with Abenakis (Video)
  • The Not so Invisible Border   
  • Diary of an Accused Pretendian
  • Atowi Project
  • Abenaki Trails Project
  • Navigating Partnerships with Indigenous People in a Time of Ethnic Fraud Panic
  • Response to Colonized ideas of “Race Shifting”
  • H.556 Passes House
  • Historic Society Explains Abenaki Erasure Myth
  • A Deep Presence: 13,000 Years of Native American History
  • The Colonial World of the Northeast
  • Surviving New England’s Great Dying
  • Resources for Native American Heritage Month
  • The Myth of Native American Extinction Harms Everyone
  • A Visit With Trudy Ann Parker Author Of Aunt Sarah
  • Statement on Abenaki Ethnocide in History, Scholarship, and Social Media
  • Riparian Zone Curriculum
  • Abenaki Perspective – Hannah Duston
  • DIY Seed Paper: Restoration Ecology for Kids!

Abenaki Arts & Education Center

Submit RESOURCES
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Contributors
    • Our Services
    • Background
    • Advisory Panel
  • Resources
    • Abenaki Tribes and Organizations
    • Articles
    • Books
    • Children’s Literature
    • Coloring Sheets
    • Curriculum
    • Ethnocide, Eugenics, & Erasure
    • Laws
    • Media
    • Teacher Tool Box
  • Exhibitions
    • Alnobak: Wearing Our Heritage
    • Nebizun: Water is Life
    • Babaskwahomwôgan: The Spirit Game
    • Parley and Protocol: Abenaki Diplomacy Past and Present
  • Programs
    • Dancing Blue Wolf Sings for Little Ones
    • Land Acknowledgements
    • Presenting Abenaki Culture in the Classroom
    • Reflections of Place: Wabanaki Textile Workshop
  • Curriculum
    • Abenaki Animal Names
    • Alnobak: Wearing Our Heritage
    • Celebrating Abenaki Culture
    • NIKWÔBI: Abenaki Performances
    • The Colonial World of the Northeast
    • Navigating the Champlain Valley 1609: Quadricentennial
    • Riparian Zone Curriculum
    • The Very Hungary Azban
    • WHAT DID YOUR LUNCH COST NATURE? Have you gotten All Tangled in a Web?
  • Allyship
  • Press Room
  • Contact Us

Tag: state recognized tribe

  1. Browse

    • Home
    • state recognized tribe

June 30, 2019 SmartEgg2 Post in Abenaki Tribes and Organizations,Uncategorized

Elnu Abenaki Tribe

Elnu is an Abenaki Tribe based in Southern Vermont.  We work to continue our cultural heritage through historical research, lectures […]

Continue Reading
Circular logo

June 24, 2019 SmartEgg2 Post in Abenaki Tribes and Organizations,Uncategorized

Nulhegan Band of the Coosuk Tribe Abenaki Nation

The mission of the Nulhegan Band of the Coosuk Abenaki Nation is to strengthen our government; to build our community, […]

Continue Reading

June 24, 2019 SmartEgg2 Post in Abenaki Tribes and Organizations,Uncategorized

Koasek Traditional Band of the Koas Abenaki Nation

The Koasek Abenaki is an autonomous band of Abenaki families of what is now called the Western Abenaki Tribes, which […]

Continue Reading

June 23, 2019 SmartEgg2 Post in Abenaki Tribes and Organizations,Uncategorized

Abenaki Nation of Missisquoi St. Francis/Sokoki Band

The Sovereign Republic of the Abenaki Nation of Missisquoi has seven elected Tribal Council Members. The Missisquoi Abenaki Tribal Council acts as […]

Continue Reading

Learn With Us!

#waterislife Abenaki Ways of Knowing abenaki women agriculture archaeology autohistory basket weaver bitawbakw clothing college culture curriculum documentary film elementary school Elnu Abenaki Tribe environmental science erasure and ethnocide family food foodways governance high school history Koasek Traditional Band of the Koas Abenaki Nation language leveled reader Mi’kmaq music native american Nebi New Hampshire Abenaki Nulhegan Band of the Coosuk Abenaki Nation Odanak Passamaquoddy science seeds of renewal St. Francis Sokoki Band of the Abenaki Nation of Missisquoi state recognized tribe St Francis story storytelling Vermont Abenaki Wabanaki water worldview

Latest Blogs

17th Century Abenaki Girl

January 27, 2023 SmartEgg2 Leave a comment

Download This coloring sheet depicts an Abenaki girl wearing pre-contact style leather clothing. She is using a corn pounder to…

Learn More

Native American Heritage Month Writing Prompt

November 22, 2022 SmartEgg2 Leave a comment

Download this writing prompt to get your students thinking about Native American Heritage Month! In 1990, the United States passed…

Learn More

Gluscape Fights the Water Serpent and How Woodpecker Got His Red Head

September 20, 2022 SmartEgg2 Leave a comment

This gourd tells two traditional Wabanaki stories. Listen to the artist Jeanne Morningstar Kent tell the stories of Gluscape Fights…

Learn More

(c) 2018. Abenaki Arts & Education Center. All Rights Researved. | Design & develop by AmpleThemes

Accessibility by WAH
  • Abenaki 101
  • Abenaki Foodways
  • About Us
  • Advisory Panel
  • Background
  • Contact Us
  • Contributors
  • Curriculum
  • Dancing Blue Wolf Sings for Little Ones
  • Dancing Blue Wolf Sings for Little Ones
  • Elementor #2996
  • Exhibitions
  • Land Acknowledgements
  • Nebi: #WaterIsLife
  • Nebi: Abenaki Protest Art
  • Nebi: Abenaki Ways of Knowing Water (video)
  • Nebi: Gluscape Fights the Water Serpent and How Woodpecker Got His Red Head
  • Nebi: Great Falls at Peskeompscut
  • Nebi: Lake Memphremagog
  • Nebi: Ojihozo
  • Nebi: Sacred Vermont Waterways
  • Nebi: The Faces
  • Nebi: The Salmon Hole
  • Nebi: Wetlands
  • Nebizun: Water is Life
  • Our Services
  • Presenting Abenaki Culture in the Classroom
  • Profile
  • Programs
  • Reflections of Place: Wabanaki Textile Workshop
  • Resources
  • Science
  • Study Guides
  • Welcome to the Abenaki Arts & Education Center!
  • Parley and Protocol: Abenaki Diplomacy Past and Present