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Educating the Indian, Part 2 (L20) Day Schools. Dr. Anton Treuer Bemidji State University. How they worked. Regular school routine during day, kids live at home with parents No uniforms, no school control over home life
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Educating the Indian, Part 2 (L20)Day Schools Dr. Anton Treuer Bemidji State University
How they worked • Regular school routine during day, kids live at home with parents • No uniforms, no school control over home life • Still a strict English-only policy: tribal language use often punished or resulting in learning disability label • Kids sometimes suspended for long hair, policy changes come slowly, attitude changes even more slowly
Whose Heroes? • Washington • Lincoln • Grant • Jackson • Architects of American democracy • Constitution, rule of law • Indian killers • Architects of removal policy & genocide • Broken treaties
Bering Strait • Fact v. Theory • How does it feel to be told that your culture, your parents and grandparents are consistently wrong?
Opportunities • Schools provide many opportunities to learn about white culture, history, heroes • How many opportunities are presented to learn about native culture, history, heroes? • Is there any wonder that there is a disconnect for many native students? • How different are day schools from boarding schools?
George Bush, Sr. • “We are approaching a momentous year in history, a year that will mark the five hundredth anniversary of one of the greatest achievements of human endeavor: Christopher Columbus' discovery of the New World... Christopher Columbus not only opened the door to a New World, but also set an example for us all by showing what monumental feats can be accomplished through perseverance and faith. I strongly encourage every American to support the Quincentenary, and to discover the significance that this milestone in history has in his or her own life.”
Ronald Reagan • “We were wrong to let Indians have reservations, we should have done more to bring them into the fold of American life.”
Resisting Education Assimilation • Drop out is not just from lack of smarts or motivation • Often lack of participation in education goes across the age spectrum in Indian communities • 1945, 8 Indian high school grads in MN • 1970, 32% Indians grad high school, 2% grad college • 1980, 55% Indians grad high school, 5% college • Better and better every decade • Indians still 4X more likely to drop out and 3X more likely to be suspended
Politics & Power in Education • Jerry-mandering reservations in school districting (Leech Lake) • Few native teachers and administrators • Few educated Indians to work in schools as teachers or administrators • Little native control of the curriculum: textbooks, language & culture offerings as electives or part of the mainstream curriculum
Tribal Initiatives • Changing attitudes, awareness of the benefits of education, NIEA, MIEA • Advocacy, JOM funding • New tribal schools, culture based curriculum, HOE in Minneapolis has more native grads than all other schools in the metro combined • Trying to make schools places where kids can learn about themselves as well as the world
Challenges • Finding qualified staff • Tribal politics, micromanagement • Attitudinal change comes slowly – developing an educating ethic • Making sure that schools don’t assimilate • Problems pervade Indian communities
Interpreting • Germans still wrestle with national guilt over the Holocaust – addressed in part by mandated instruction about it • America has dark chapters in its history too, but we have yet to assume national responsibility for them much less make them right
Tribal Language Immersion Schools • Waadookodaading (Hayward, WI) • Niigaane (Bena, MN) • Hawaiians, Maori, Piegan, Mowhawk