Board Member George Ann Gregory, Ph.D.
Dr. Gregory in an old style traditional Choctaw dress
Dr. Gregory performing for a kohunga reo (language nest) in Aotearoa
Good News! Language loss can be reversed. For more information, contact Dr. Gregory.
George Ann Gregory, Chahta/Ani-yun-wiya, has a Ph.D. in Applied Linguistics and is a Fulbright Scholar.
She is a lifelong educator who has developed language
and literacy with ages preschool through adults.
She has worked with a variety of ethnic and linguistics
groups, including Amerindian, Southeast Asian, Latin
American, Middle-Eastern, European, African American,
Hispanic American, and Anglo American. She has an official biography in Who' s Who in America.
Her research includes grammatical analysis of compositions
and teaching methods that work. Her publications include
research articles, essays, short stories, poetry, and
stories for children. Dr. Gregory is currently faculty for TVI Community College and the College of Santa Fe in Albuquerque.
She has been an active part of the Indian community of Albuquerque for over twenty years and has been privileged to participate in several Native language institutes and conferences as an instructor and presenter.
Dr. Gregory's current research projects include the revitalization of Nahuatl in two kalpullin in New Mexico, creating a computer corpus of written Choctaw, and the voices of Maori Language Revitalization. She was the first Native American and foreign linguist to visit New Zealand in twenty years sto study Maori Language Revitalization.
To contact Dr. Gregory about her language revitalization work, click here
Holabitubbe.
To learn more about Dr. Gregory's online grammar and writing courses, click here Dr. Grammar Guru.
To see photos of Dr. Gregory's trip, go to
Kia ora journal.
For a copy of Holocaust of Native America, text only version, click here Holocaust.
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