Why Isn’t This Map in the History Books of today?
By the age of 10, most children in the United States have been taught all 50 states that make up the country.
But centuries ago, the land that is now the United States was a very different place.
Over 20 million Native Americans dispersed across over 1,000 distinct tribes, bands, and ethnic groups populated the territory.
FWIW: Growing up and going to school in El Paso, Texas, back in the 1940s and 1950s, it seems most of our Native American studies surrounded the Apache, Pima, Comanche, Pueblo, and Navajo, and the offspring of those larger Tribes just mentioned.
For instance, the Tegua and Ysleta Indians were a breakaway tribe of the Pueblo with their current home being in downtown El Paso, Texas.
Which leads me to wonder if any of this is taught in schools around the country today, and at what grade levels?
