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“Friendship, Peace, Forever” – 1613 Two Row Wampum Treaty

When: Tuesday, December 1, 2020, 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM (MT)
Where: Online Zoom Meeting
Cost: Free

To advance equity, Indigenous Vision welcomes the public to join us in a facilitated community dialogue on Cultural Humility and the lifelong process of critical self-reflection and redressing the power imbalances. Your questions and insight are welcome.

Zoom Registration Link: Registration is now closed!

Important Notice: Portions of these dialogues are interactive, please give yourself the gift of focus and being present.

Cultural Humility replaces the insufficient notion of “cultural competence” with a cyclical approach that embraces critical self-reflection as a lifelong learning process to create a broader, more inclusive view of the world. This training is the first session of a 2-part series dedicated to covering the principles of Cultural Humility for the community. Please join our upcoming sessions.

Who should attend?

All are welcome, from community members and organizers to students to teachers to government workers. Our entire community can benefit from practicing Cultural Humility.

Meet the trainers:

Souta Calling Last is the Founder and Executive Director of Indigenous Vision and a Roddenberry Fellow Alum. She was trained as a Cultural Humility Trainer from Dr. Melanie Tervalon and holds a MM in Innovative Change Management from the University of Phoenix and a BA in Environmental Studies-Water Resources from the University of Montana. She has 19 years of experience facilitating dialogue and leading training sessions. Souta is a citizen of the Blood Tribe.

Tyler Walls is the Project Director of Indigenous Vision. He was trained as a Cultural Humility Trainer from Dr. Melanie Tervalon and is a graduate of Arizona State University with a BS in American Indian Studies and a minor in Geography. He has 13 years of experience facilitating dialogue and leading training sessions. Tyler is a citizen the Hopi Tribe and Onondaga Nation.

Indigenous Vision is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization based in Phoenix, AZ, and Missoula, MT with a mission to revitalize Indigenous communities – culture, people, and land – by providing educational resources through quality programs that promote well-being. Learn more and support us at www.indigenousvision.org

The Cultural Humility model is sourced from a Train the Trainers session taught by Dr. Melanie Tervalon and Dr. Jann Murray-Garcia, along with their published article:

M. Tervalon, J. Murray-Garcia (1998). Cultural humility versus cultural competence: a critical distinction in defining physician training outcomes in multicultural education, Journal of healthcare for the poor and underserved, Vol. 9, No. 2. (May 1998), pp. 117-125