Dr. Linda Goulet is Professor Emerita in the Department of Indigenous Education, Health and Social Work at First Nations University of Canada where she taught Indigenous pedagogies, health and arts education. She has led in-school research into an anti-racism program and later, an Elders in residence program. Her latest research projects were with First Nations students and their teachers using drama and the arts to explore social issues of health. Her recent publication, co-authored with her husband Keith, is entitled Teaching each other: Nehinuw concepts and Indigenous pedagogies (2014) published by UBC Press. Together they work with teachers and schools to bring Indigenous understandings to teaching practices.
Keith Goulet is a Nehinuw (Cree) from Cumberland House in northern Saskatchewan and is a fluent Cree speaker. He was raised in a trapping, fishing, hunting, and gathering context. He has a B.Ed., M.Ed. and is presently a Ph.D. candidate on the issue of land. He has been a teacher, Cree language consultant, teacher education program developer (NORTEP), an executive director of Gabriel Dumont Institute and a regional community college principal. He co-authored Teaching Each Other with his wife Linda book which is structured and integrated with Nehinuw (Cree) pedagogy. He was a cabinet minister from 1992 to 2001 and served in the Saskatchewan legislature as an MLA for 17 years.
