Chief chat: Cherokee language preservation moving forward. December 27, 2024. Tahlequah Daily Press.
The course series will start in the fall of 2024 with instructor Gil Jackson. The course is part fo the university’s new Native American Studies…
On February 23, 2024, five students graduated from the Cherokee Language/Master Apprentic program.
A new exhibit called “Weynena Smith: To Live a Cherokee Life” runs January 9 through May 11 at the Saline Courthouse Museum.
The permanent authorization includes a mimimum operating fund of $18 million annually and $35 million for new language projects such as a new Cherokee Immersion…
Language learners from the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians and Māori exchange visits to each other’s nations.
The proposed legislation indefinitely authorizes the Durbin Feeling Language Preservation Act and would include the construction of a $30 million immersion middle school and expansion…
Cherokee One Feather editor Robert Jumper describes what he believes is needed to encourage people to learn Cherokee.
Patrick Del Percio, currently a Cherokee language instructor at the University of Oklahoma, will teach the class in the fall of 2023.
The film “Siren of the Wood’ is a Cherokee language film that was filmed in Tahlequah.