Changing the System While You Are in the System Is Not Easy: Creating Cultural Safety for Native American Students on Campus

Authors

  • Turquoise Skye Devereaux Arizona State University
  • Laurie A. Walker Montana State University

Keywords:

culture, higher education, Native American, resilience, worldview

Abstract

As a Native American social work student and practicum supervisor, we describe a program evaluation at a campus Native American student services site and share insights on integrating Indigenous ways of knowing, cultural practices, and a justice orientation into identities and practices. We describe disseminating findings and student efforts to work within systems to make policy changes; however, changing a system—that constantly tells you that you (and who you are) are not meant to be there—while you are in the system is not easy. We describe key engagement concepts including microaggressions, stereotype threat, tokenism, resiliency, and survivance. We—as decolonizing social work scholars—provide a vision for how to move forward together in creating culturally safe classrooms, campuses, communities, and social work practices grounded in Indigenous ways of knowing and being.

Author Biographies

Turquoise Skye Devereaux, Arizona State University

Turquoise Skye Devereaux, MSW is Student, School of Social Work, Arizona State University, Mesa, AZ (t.s.devereaux@gmail.com).

Laurie A. Walker, Montana State University

Laurie A. Walker, PhD is Assistant Teaching Professor, Department of Native American Studies, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT (laurie.walker@montana.edu).

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Published

2023-09-29

How to Cite

Devereaux, T. S., & Walker, L. A. (2023). Changing the System While You Are in the System Is Not Easy: Creating Cultural Safety for Native American Students on Campus. Reflections: Narratives of Professional Helping, 29(2), 32–48. Retrieved from https://reflectionsnarrativesofprofessionalhelping.org/index.php/Reflections/article/view/1965