50 likes | 213 Views
Federal Indian Policy and Indian Education. The Treaty Era (1776 - 1871)tribal land exchanged for federal protection from state jurisdiction over reserved landsformal education provided by religious denominations and federal government The Allotment and Assimilation Era (1871 - 1934)much of re
E N D
2. Federal Law Principles of Tribal Sovereignty Tribes are separate sovereign governments
Tribal sovereignty generally extends over tribal territory
Tribal sovereignty is inherent but subject to limitation by Congress
3. Federal Indian Policy and Indian Education The Treaty Era (1776 - 1871)
tribal land exchanged for
federal protection from state jurisdiction over reserved lands
formal education provided by religious denominations and federal government
The Allotment and Assimilation Era (1871 - 1934)
much of remaining tribal lands taken and opened up
federal Indian schools and beginning of transfer of Indian education to state public schools
The Modern Era (1934 - present)
Indian Reorganization and Self-Determination
continued transfer of Indian education to states
beginning of some regain of tribal control over education
4. Highlights of the Modern Era with respect to educationThe 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 Title I and Title III programs
Indian Education Act 1972 Formula Grant program
Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975 BIA-funded schools and contract programs (JOM)
1978 ESEA Reauthorization Impact Aid, IEA, BIA-funded schools
1984 ESEA Reauthorization
1988 ESEA Reauthorization
5. Highlights . . . education (continued)The 1990s and 21st Century Native American Languages Acts of 1990 and 1992
Indian Nations at Risk Report (1991) and White House Conference on Indian Education Report (1992)
1994 ESEA Reauthorization
Executive Order No. 13096 (1998)
2001 ESEA Reauthorization (NCLB)
Executive Order No. 13336 (2004)
6. Picture of Indian Education Today @ 500,000 elementary and secondary tribal students
90 % attend state public schools
@ 560 federally recognized tribes
over 110 Tribal Education Departments
@ 190 schools operated by BIA or Tribes
over 30 tribal colleges & universities
nationwide, federal funding is @ 10% of all funding spent on elementary and secondary education. Indian education funding is a fraction of that 10%