Final answer:
Option A) A school to learn Christian values and beliefs was not offered in treaties with Native Americans. These treaties were more about land and assimilation, and the schooling was a method imposed by Europeans and the US government to convert and assimilate Native peoples.
Step-by-step explanation:
The treaty aspects that did not reflect the agreements with Native Americans is option A) A school to learn Christian values and beliefs. Most treaties with Native Americans during the period of western settlement were focused on land and the federal policy aimed at assimilation and civilization of the tribes. The Native Americans did not offer to set up a school to learn Christian values and beliefs; this was a strategy employed by Europeans and the US government. White settlers would often offer trade goods, which is reflected in options B) and D), and the US government did establish lands in trust forms, as indicated in option C).
Native Americans commonly had different views on land ownership and it was Europeans who introduced the concept of personal property and the use of fences to define it. Native American treaties were often signed under pressure or duress, with many Natives feeling they had no choice but to accept the modest provisions in lieu of cash offered by the government. Assimilation policies included efforts to civilize natives by encouraging them to adopt farming and converting them to Christianity, sometimes by forcefully removing children to boarding schools.