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Cynthia-Lou Coleman
Professor and researcher at Portland State University who studies science communication, particularly issues that impact American Indians. She is enrolled with the Osage tribe.
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Native science
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Native Science
Monthly Archives: July 2012
When Science Meets Superstition
We can’t help but be a tad superstitious when it comes to our well-being. Including me. Human nature lets us take credit when good things come our way: we think we somehow deserve it. But when bad juju befalls us, … Continue reading
Posted in authenticity, community, Family, health, Indian, medicine, science, science communication
Tagged literacy, science, social determinants of health, stereotypes, writing
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The End of Science
Is it the end of science as we know it? You might get that impression if you read through the sheaf of articles following the discovery in July of the Higgs Boson. After learning Higgs Boson wasn’t a wayward sailor … Continue reading
Posted in community, risk, science, science communication, Uncategorized
Tagged native science, science
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Power of the Story
Stories are important for everyone, and particularly for indigenous people whose traditions have survived through narratives. When I first heard of narrative medicine, I figured that western medicine had taken a page from my Native ancestors. Get the patients to … Continue reading
Posted in authenticity, health
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