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ALASKA
NATIVE EDUCATION
1953 – 1973
A
PROFESSIONAL MEMOIR
BY
TOM (THOMAS) R. HOPKINS © 2008
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- FOREWORD
INTRODUCTION
BRIEF HISTORY OF EDUCATING ALASKA NATIVES 1867 TO 1953
- Introduction
Early Russian and U.S. Schools
Development of U.S. Schools
The Development of Missionary Schools
Government Schools
Sheldon Jackson
The BIA Takes Over Native Education
- EDUCATION PHILOSOPHY AND TEACHER PREPARATION
BARROW, 1953-54
- Arriving At Barrow and BIA Orientation to Teach Eskimos 1953 and Other Things
Teaching the Seventh and Eighth Grades
Standardized Tests at Barrow
The Educational
Disconnect: Washington,
Juneau and the Villages
Extra Curricular Activities
Leaving
Barrow
- SHUNGNAK DAY SCHOOL, 1954 – 1956
- The Principal-Teacher
A First Look At the Station
Major Problems Needing Immediate
Attention
Preparing the School and
Classroom
The
Community School Concept
Tacit
Education Goals
Shungnak Subsistence Economy
Student Records, Placement and Enrollments
The Curriculum and Learning
Materials
Planning
The Paper Cabinet
The School Breakfast or Lunch
The Shungnak
Jade Project
The Short Wave Radio
Past Teachers
Visiting
Nurse and Village Health
Returning Boarding School Students
Advisory Duties
The Kobuk Territorial School
Community Social Activities
Other Duties As Assigned
Important Non Education Issues
The White House Conference
on Children
Juneau Education Administrators Meeting, January 1956
Going Back to
Austin
- MT. EDGECUMBE SCHOOL JULY 1958 – DECEMBER
1963
- Learning the Mt. Edgecumbe Situation
The Mt.
Edgecumbe Facility
The
Student
Bank
The Academic Department
Head
After
the Academic Head Left and Finishing the Thesis
BIA Regulations
and
Administrative Procedures, A Separate School
System
The Curriculum Change
The Academic Department
The Students
Arrive
The Daily
Bulletin
The Student Council
Report Cards
Mt. Edgecumbe
Teacher Handbook
Standardized Testing Program
Achievement Test Uses
IQ Tests
Student Discipline
Teacher
Evaluations
The
Commercial
Teacher’s Fate
The Chemistry Teacher
Interscholastic Debate
Mt. Edgecumbe Boys Basketball and Physical Education
The Higher
Education Situation for Natives,
1958-59
- OTHER TOPICS
- Civil Servants as Teachers
Scheduling
Students to Classes
The 1961
Summer Program At
The University of Alaska
Changing the Academic Curriculum at Mt. Edgecumbe
Dr. Charles
K Ray, University of
Alaska, Fairbanks
Problems and Tragedies
The 1963
Summer
Program
Student Pride in Mt. Edgecumbe
- INVOLVEMENT IN ALASKA NATIVE EDUCATION AFTER MT. EDGECUMBE
- Mt. Edgecumbe Evaluation
Rebuilding
Mt. Edgecumbe
First Cross-Cultural Circumpolar
Education
Conference
Bilingual
Education Initiatives
Alaska Bilingual
Education Initiative
Other Assignments
Alaska Native Needs Assessment in Education (Project
ANNA)
- AFTERWORD
References
APPENDICES
A – Edgecumbe Teacher Handbook, 1959, Selected Topics
B – Philosophical Writings for 1961 Summer Program, USBIA and University
of Alaska, Fairbanks. By Alfred E. Miller, Ph.D. M.D. and Vinita F. Hopkins
C – 1963 Summer Program Report, USBIA and University of Alaska, Fairbanks
D – L. Madison Coombs’ Paper, 1969 Alaska Native Meeting, USBIA
and University of Alaska, Fairbanks
E – Charles K. Ray’s, Project ANNA, Part II, Alaska Native Education,
An Historical Perspective
F – Judith S. Kleinfeld, “Characteristics of Alaska Native Students,” a
report for the Alaska Native Needs Assessment (Project ANNA), 1973.
Appendices will be found on the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska Native
Knowledge Network.
The
University of Alaska Fairbanks is an Affirmative
Action/Equal Opportunity employer, educational
institution, and provider is a part of the University of Alaska
system. Learn more about UA's notice of nondiscrimination.
Alaska Native Knowledge
Network
University of Alaska Fairbanks
PO Box 756730
Fairbanks AK 99775-6730
Phone (907) 474.1902
Fax (907) 474.1957 |
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Last
modified
March 20, 2008
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