
The 2026 Wisconsin Indian Education Association (WIEA) Conference brought educators, community leaders, students, and advocates together in Baraboo, Wisconsin, from April 8-10 under the theme “Balancing Our Cultural Evolution.” The Wisconsin Indian Education Association was established in 1985 by a group of concerned Indian educators and remains the only statewide conference in Wisconsin dedicated specifically to Native American educational issues. This year’s conference explored how Native traditions, language revitalization, and community-centered practices can exist alongside emerging technologies and new approaches to teaching and learning.
Hosted at Ho-Chunk Gaming Wisconsin Dells, this year’s gathering highlighted the importance of honoring Indigenous knowledge while preparing students and communities for the future. Sessions focused on culturally responsive education, Indigenous sovereignty in curriculum, storytelling, language preservation, community partnerships, and innovative teaching tools – all grounded in the idea that meaningful learning happens when cultural identity and community knowledge are centered.
Several sessions stood out for the depth and range of approaches on display. One session focused on translating the children’s book Ishkode: A Story of Fire into the K-12 curriculum, helping students understand the difficult history of people, fire, colonization, and landscape health in the Great Lakes region. Another, “Indigenous Arts and Sciences: Seasonal Lessons from All Learners,” showcased culturally engaged environmental science lessons developed collaboratively by IAS partners, educators, and community members – a joint publication of the Bad River, Red Cliff, Lac du Flambeau, and Ho-Chunk Nations alongside UW-Madison’s Earth Partnership. A thought-provoking session on AI, Indigenous language, and cultural responsibility invited educators and community members to critically examine the limits of artificial intelligence in relation to Indigenous languages, including concerns around data sovereignty, accuracy, and why AI cannot replace language transmission or Traditional Knowledge.
Keynote speakers addressed leadership, cultural identity, sovereignty, and the role education plays in strengthening Native communities. Ho-Chunk Nation President Jon Greendeer opened the conference with reflections on leadership and community, while additional keynote speakers included Professor Paul Rykken of UW-Green Bay, Dr. Marcus Lewis, and Jason Dropik.
The conference also celebrated students, educators, elders, and language programs through the annual WIEA awards banquet. Award recipients represented communities and institutions across Wisconsin and highlighted the breadth of work happening in Native education throughout the state.
For WiLS, the conference offered an important reminder that access, preservation, storytelling, and education are all connected. Libraries and educational organizations have opportunities to support Indigenous communities not only through resources and collections, but also through partnerships that elevate Native voices, histories, and ways of knowing.
