Alaskan Eskimo Education:
A Film Analysis of Cultural
Confrontation in the Schools
5/The classrooms on
film
THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS OF ANCHORAGE
The flight from Bethel to Anchorage
is two hours by jet. As the plane circled away from Bethel, brown
tundra was breaking through the thawed May snowpack. The river was
nearly clear of ice in channels of black water. But the mountains
southward that wall in the Kuskokwim watershed were still locked
in the Arctic winter. The journey eastward was over hundreds of miles
of Alaska wilderness, for the most part empty of human life, and
this wilderness made the city of Anchorage on Cook Inlet shocking
in its vast spread of roads and squared property. As we settled into
the airport, the White man’s world blotted out the North.
Anchorage
is spoken of as the largest Native village in Alaska, but it is a
White man’s city, almost completely removed from the
Arctic. It contains an effectual public school system with Native
children comprising 7 percent of the student body. These figures
are deceptive, for some schools in Anchorage have no Native children
at all, and many White youngsters grow up here with no contact with
Indians, Aleuts, or Eskimos. The Superintendent of Elementary Education
was not happy with the Native education in the schools. “We
believe only a portion of the Native children are in school. Many
children are not even registered. School is so painful to some Native
children that they simply stop coming.”
With this discouraging
introduction we set out to film the same sample as in the Bethel
school: from kindergarten through to tenth grade,
with a recording of one Special Education class for the deaf.
Kindergarten
In the Head Start class in Kwethluk we filmed a unity and growth
in togetherness. In Bethel we filmed compulsive efforts to command
learning in kindergarten. In Anchorage we filmed the professionalism
of a well-trained teacher conducting a programmed kindergarten where
children were directed and gently manipulated into education.
The
film opens on a noisy, visually happy kindergarten class scattered around a
quadrangle of low tables in a bright, large, well-equipped
room-“an enlarged playhouse,” as one researcher noted.
The class included four Native children-an Eskimo boy, an Indian
boy, and two part-Indian girls who looked more Latin than Indian-plus
one Black boy, and twelve very White boys and girls.
The teacher in
a clear, attractive voice brings order and calls the roll-an innovation
in our Alaskan experience. Then a girl student
stands holding the American flag, the class pledges allegiance
and sings “My country, ‘tis of thee . . .,” and
we know we are back in the United States.
Control, order, and direction
set this kindergarten apart from all the other early childhood classes.
How does this affect the Native
students? The Eskimo boy grins with usual Eskimo enthusiasm. The
Indian boy sits wrapped inside himself, docile and obedient. The
part-Indian girls seem absorbed into the White community.
The film
shows students who keep their seats. There is little wandering around, except
for one loner. He drifts off by himself to play house.
The teacher moves from one program to another, sing songs about left
hand and right hand, and conducts dance games to nursery rhymes she
calls out. Students stand on their chairs, revolve their arms, stand
on the floor, and wave their arms like birds. Work sheets are passed
out. Students begin working with discipline and enthusiasm.
The Eskimo
boy stops smiling and begins yawning and turning away from his tasks. The Indian
boy is sitting alone in space, no one
sitting by him. He smiles feebly, watching others for direction,
and finally dropping off, pillows his head on his arms and remains
very still. The part-Indian girls also appear out of the group now,
one down at the end of a table sitting alone, one centrally seated
close to the one Black boy. The Black boy makes many overtures and,
not getting reception, begins to bother the part-Indian girl.
Now
a group of White children are all sitting together on one side of the table
quadrangle with the Eskimo boy seated in their center.
In the first part of the filming he seems to be fitting in, works
vigorously at his work sheet, and attracts the attention of the teacher.
But the longer the class continues, the quieter he becomes. A nursery
melody is put on the record player. It is time for recess, and everyone
lines up at the door in the conventional, separate, male-female lines.
The
film of free-play outside reveals more structured behavior. At first the Eskimo
boy is working in the sand hole with four White
children. But soon he leaves of his own accord and turns to single
play-carrying and throwing large rocks, balancing over a series of
planks placed over dried up mud holes. The Indian boy changes his
manner entirely. Outside he is still a loner but aggressive, running,
chasing White children, finally manually capturing a White girl and
forcibly dragging her out of sight around a building wall.
This well-run
kindergarten can hardly be called a painful experience for Native children.
Yet the two Native boys do express an apartness
and behavior that is lonely. The part-Indian girls also were not a part of the larger group. It was amazing to see just the same nursery
rhyme gestures that we had seen performed in a small, emotionally
related, body-touching group in Kwethluk Head Start acted out here
regimentally by all seventeen students. Here was the conforming style
of the urban and suburban school. Would the Native children adjust
and learn in this different environment?
First Grade
Native children
were less visible in first grade than they were in kindergarten. Were they
adjusting to the dominant class
culture the way White children adjusted to the dominant Eskimo culture
in Bethel? Only one Native student appeared having difficulties,
and the two Indian girls in the room were ranked as high achievers.
This
is a large first grade, twenty-five students taught by an elderly, white-haired
woman assisted by a young female aide. There are six
Natives in the class-one Eskimo boy, three Indian boys, and two Indian
girls. One of the Indian boys is visibly withdrawn from the class,
never leaving his desk and unresponsive to communications from seatmates.
He is ranked by the teacher as an average student. The Eskimo boy
and an Indian boy seated near him are both ranked low by the teacher,
but their behavior is neutral-relaxed and outgoing. We assume that
personality problems are submerged in first grade, probably also
in second and third, and barely visible in fifth grade, as student
problems take on definition.
This first grade is a programmed, well-run
class, held in order by the professionalism of a seasoned teacher, and it is
a class which
could have further leveled any behavioral differences. This white-haired
teacher gathers her flock around her with much impersonal coaxing,
comforting, and habitual gestures of affection. She works with small
groups, as does her aide, in reading exercises. The children respond
dutifully and attentively, but her teaching is not as directional
as in Bethel first grades, and little effort is made to draw out
individual students. One gets the impression that there is more order
but less learning than observed in Mrs. Artist’s first grade
class in Bethel, and compared with Mr. Scout’s second grade
this class is just passing time.
Except for the one withdrawn Indian
boy, students do circulate freely around the room to join the reading
groups of both teachers, but
they always return to their seats with minimal interaction with their
classmates. Teacher-to-student communications seem to blow over the
heads of the class without focus. Behavior is wriggly and full of
daydreaming, though one Indian girl is visibly involved, penciling
pages, leafing through books, comparing notes with her seatmates-behavior
which stands out in this class. This alert Indian girl appears not
to be getting any social attention but is just turning on by herself.
Fifth
Grade
There were seven Natives in this class of twenty-seven students taught
by a motivated male teacher assisted by an uncommunicating
female. This room had the congestion one might expect in a city classroom.
The class was divided and operated oppositionally by the projections
of the two teachers’ personalities. The male teacher was seated
on a high stool by the windows, encircled by students sitting at
desks, on desks, and in chairs. He appeared to draw his students
to him, whereas the female teacher sat stolidly at the front of her
desk-seated students and never moved through the filming, nor did
students go to her. As identified on the seating diagram, three of
the Native students were in the assistant’s section and four,
and one Black boy, in the main teacher’s section. But circumstances
had moved students around so that most of the Native students were
in the head teacher’s group, and only two Natives in the assistant’s
section.
We have not identified what the assistant was presenting,
but the male teacher was reading the geography of Colorado. The routine
was
similar to Mr. Native’s General Science class in Bethel. The
teacher read from the text and the students read in turn.
Native students
sat close to the male teacher, and there was intense eye contact
throughout the lesson. The male teacher returned the
eye contact, so that there was a strong sense of intragroup relating.
After a few minutes the group opened, desks were reoccupied, and
the teacher circulated among the individual students, leaning over
and sitting by them in person-to-person instruction. He worked intensely
with various Native students and a long time with the Black boy in
a circumstance reminiscent of Mr. Scout in the second grade
in Bethel. But the teacher was harassed. The class was too big, and
many students did not get attention. The teacher was concerned, as
if he knew he was unable to give the help that was truly needed.
Native children knew the head teacher had a listening ear, and there
was almost a pathetic eagerness on their part to be heard.
The female
assistant gave no visible support to students, and there was the conventional
gulf between teacher and class. Here the two
Native students responded very differently. The Native boy goofed
and downed. The alert Native girl tried to keep in touch, follow
the lesson, and keep cool. The White girls around her appeared to
accept her. She looked smart, was well dressed and attractive. The
Native boy was ignored.
Generally we were impressed how Native children
were fitting into the White urban classrooms. But we asked this same question
in relation
to White students in Bethel-how did they adjust without stress to
the dominant Eskimo pace? The White pace in Anchorage in turn dominated
the Native students, swept them along in the elementary grades. But
was this apparent adjustment obscuring problems that might have to
be faced later in circumstances more difficult than first and fifth
grade?
The Native Parent as Teacher in the White School
The principal
of this elementary school appeared sophisticated about the challenge
facing his Native students, but the school system had no special
programs to alleviate this stress. Teachers faced these problems
on their own, for help was not offered.
A St. Lawrence Island woman
had a son in second grade, and in a gesture of welcome, the principal asked
this mother to show her collection
of color snapshots and tell the class about life on the islands.
Here was a chance to see the response to a Native teaching about
a truly relevant Alaskan subject, one of the more isolated Eskimo
communities just 30 miles across the Bering Sea from Russia.
The “picture
talk” was held in a series of small groups
around a table. In this session the principal, a White boy, the Eskimo
mother, and an Indian boy sat on one side. At the head of the table
sat one more White boy, and across from the mother sat an Indian
girl, a Black boy, the mother’s little boy, and another Eskimo
boy. The woman had a quiet assured verbal delivery and passed the
photographs around slowly, explaining each picture in detail.
The
pattern of response was surprising. Reasonably the two Eskimo boys
really turned on when together they pored over the snapshots.
But the next most involved was the Black boy. He looked very
intently at each picture, and at one point his eyes opened wide with
wonder. The Indian girl showed perfunctory interest. The White
boy at the head of the table showed flashes of interest, then sagged
into real boredom. The Indian boy looked intently at the pictures,
but frowned and looked depressed and weary. The White boy by the
principal handled the pictures but showed no interest.
As a teacher
the Eskimo woman was unflagging, thorough, and attentive to each student with
focused eye attention as she talked. She set
a voice and body rhythm and retained it to the end of the filming.
She gave special attention to the White boys, as if they were the
culturally deprived ones who deserved special attention. She leaned
toward them, speaking and projecting to them with hand motion and
eye focus. She demonstrated that a Native teacher can do a controlled
clear empathetic assignment in reaching that matches and even betters
many professional teachers in the schools.
Did this lesson relate
to and support the Native students? It certainly did the two Eskimos. It amazed
the Black child (as another “Native”).
It moved the Indian boy but puzzled him. It did not appreciably affect
the White students, though it certainly informed them.
But the learning
situation was excellent-casual, clear, unhurried, and highly personified-and
ideal for the disoriented Native student.
It is true there was no feedback from the students, except for nonverbal
signalling between the two Eskimo boys, but there could have been
and would have been, had the teacher shifted her approach. For the
Eskimo guest was conventionally aggressive in her style, probably
just like some White teacher on St. Lawrence Island. She did not
pause long enough in her lecture type presentation for students to
express their feelings. After the chaos of crowded and confused students
this was still a rewarding moment of relaxed education.
Special Education:
A Deaf Class
The culture of education changes abruptly when one enters a Special
Education class. In many ways, in terms of Native children, education
begins. Here teachers deal directly with children. Each student’s
problem becomes the focus of curriculum, and the goals of learning
seem directed toward giving confidence and fluency to each child.
The goal appears personality fulfillment rather than reaching a conformity
of skills. This was as true in the Anchorage Special Ed classes for
the deaf as it was in Bethel. We filmed a small class of six students-a
Black boy, a White girl, a White boy, and three Indian boys; all
between ten and twelve. The White girl appeared to have special problems;
she sat smilingly by herself. The rest interacted together in
ways very similar to the Bethel deaf class, though this was a more
advanced group.
Film opens on a middle-aged White woman communicating
orally and nonverbally with a responsive circle of five children
gathered
around an overhead projector. The lesson is a painfully intense group
effort in communication, where students try to move from written
symbols to understanding verbal meanings in spoken words. There is
no representational material to verbalize around. The teacher asks
simple questions, as recorded on tape:
T: What is cooked on the
stove?
S: Daddy cooks.
This staggered verbal probing is buttressed by fluent hand talk
that is exchanged between all the students.
S: Cook-da.
T: Yes, finished.
S: Cooked.
T: Johnny, what does he cook? What?
Johnny: Feetsh!
T: Fish.
The staggered, nearly blocked communication of the tape is not reflected
on the film. Here we see a class communicating intensely to the teacher
and with
each other. Visually this class signals more intragroup communion than any
other class in Anchorage, and with high enthusiasm. The students are asked
verbal questions. They try to answer verbally, then write verbal answers legibly
on the transparent overhead slate, and read their projected writing. This draws
in the concentration of the whole class.
We cannot really judge the sense of
the questions and answers because so much interlocking meaning is hand talk
and general nonverbal communication. But
it is our hunch that curriculum is minimal and skill in speech therapy very
high. The teacher is very motivating in her efforts to help the students speak
and communicate verbally. But as in Bethel this enthusiasm is directed more
intensely toward the abstract goal of communication rather than toward particular
goals within communication. Method is to focus learning directly on the
individual rather than generally to the class, and the result is that students
with grave problems are enthusiastic learners.
In this learning environment
there were no differences between Native and White or Black students.
Their common hardships and equal class recognition welded
them into one close group. The research team all rated this class the most
educationally fulfilling class in Anchorage.
Junior High School: Eighth Grade
Math
Education changes severely between fifth grade in elementary and eighth
grade in junior high. The fifth-grade teacher taught individuals. Even within
the
overcrowded chaos he made a great effort to retain a teacher-to-student relationship.
The
opening film of eighth grade is a shock. Class size has grown to eighty-five
students. The teacher no longer sits with his students but stands on a
platform above them. He is speaking to the class crowd, never to an individual. Communication
is verbal or nonverbal by blackboard demonstration. There is no teacher-to-student
eye communication, rarely any student-to-student communication. Everyone seems
well disciplined to watch the board and to listen. Somewhere between fifth
grade and eighth grade, classroom culture has changed completely.
The film opens
with an alert, verbally fluent young teacher lecturing from a raised dais.
He turns from notes to writing figures on the blackboard-answers
to problems from a past lesson. Then he introduces the next challenge-mathematical
probability. He outlines a series of problems, and then gives the class time
to work them out. At one point he interrupts his lecture to say, “You
kids in the back of the room, quiet down!”
The final high point of the
session is a practical demonstration of probability, with each of the students
tossing coins and recording the heads-or-tails results.
The class suddenly springs to life, with students tossing coins wildly. The
teacher interjects, “You don’t have to flip them up to the ceiling
to get results!” The teacher leaves the front of the room and watches
the class from his desk located at one side of the room, and the students settle
down to compute probability.
There are eight Natives scattered through this
large class. In the early minutes of film all of them seem adjusting to this
impersonal circumstance. There is
no appreciable difference in their behavior, though the camera was unable
to record clearly some of these students. One Native student did stand out
immediately because of an extremely self-conscious manner. He was listening,
but at the same time showed anxiety with a stiff posture and eyes that looked
searchingly about him, as if in confusion or distraction.
General class behavior
with the beginning of the coin tossing was social with joking and goofing.
But as the problem deepened, students became increasingly
absorbed. Heads dropped lower and body positions shifted to postures of absorbed
thought and quandry. The Native students held on with no visible signs of lagging,
except for the Indian boy at the back of the room. His head dropped lower and
lower. His pencil hand was moving. He was struggling. Now his head dropped
all the way in his arms and stayed there a long rime. When he straightened
there was a noticeable change in expression. His face was angry, and after
a bit his head sank down on his desk again.
A White boy next to this Indian
at the far back of the room presented an extreme contrast in study behavior.
This student had pushed his desk out and propped
his feet up on another empty desk and settled himself in a half-reclining position,
designed to give both comfort and a more absorbing approach to his copybook
problem. He chewed his pencil, erased, chewed, scribbled, and gave an appearance
of enthusiastic absorption with his mathematical riddle.
The Indian boy sat
rigidly, not enjoying the situation, and when he did participate, it was with
extreme effort as his body signaled slow defeat, finally sinking
completely down on his desk. Indeed, this is a sample of one, but maybe it
does describe how a Native student gives up.
Ninth Grade English
Ninth grade was held in the same room as eighth grade.
It was appreciably smaller, about fifty-five students. Even more importantly,
the challenge was very different.
This class was not the intensely achieving circumstance that was observed in
eighth-grade math. The subject was a technical review in grammatical construction
and was demonstrational with a lowered demand on both concentration and cognition.
Film
opens with the teacher not on a dias but speaking from a podium on the floor.
This was not the regular teacher. The challenge for the class is chalked
on the board: “The umpire insisting that his eye sight was excellent
declined to reverse his decision-this to be punctuated, requiring an analysis
of the various modifying words, phrases, and clauses. The teacher proceeds
to ask questions about the sentence structure. There are answers from the floor
and lots of apparent note taking.
A second challenge: “The filling mashed
potatoes soaked in olive oil was not very tasty” More questions and answers,
though this one was more complicated. It would appear that if your English
had a weak structural background
this lesson would have very little significance. On film the subject had little
significance to anyone. Hence there was a general distraction and shared
boredom that made recognition of Native behavior difficult.
But there were patterns
in the room. The fifteen Native students were bunched together in twos and
threes with at least two Natives sitting alone in the
midst of White students. Native behavior was goofing around. Two Indian boys
in the front row were handling the circumstance humorously, sharing jokes with
their nearby White companions. Two Native girls in the far back rows conversed
with each other, appeared as nonparticipants, and remained aloof from their surrounding White schoolmates. One Indian boy near the front on the far right
responded with frowns that could be interpreted both as stress and disapproval,
but doggedly held onto the lesson and was one of the most applied members of
the class. A lone Indian girl dutifully made notes and listened intently with
a calm look that might mean tolerance as well as boredom. At the end of the
class time she walked slowly through the room with composure and dignity, avoiding
and ignoring the students around her.
The teacher pushed his traditional grammar
lesson hard and responded, when kids were overtly misbehaving, “I would
like you to move up next to Momont, Mr. Christiansen, so you won’t have
to worry about what’s going
on outside!” At other times when responding or asking questions he called
students by first name. In both classes teachers were laboring under established
school culture, class size, and curriculum. They taught intensely but
in the case of the grammar lesson, with futility. Nevertheless, these were
typical circumstances that Native children must face when leaving the villages
for congested city schools.
High School: Tenth Grade History
This was the end of our sample curve and our
final opportunity to observe the welfare of Native students in White schools.
The tenth grade was as contrasting
to junior high as eighth grade was to elementary school, and offered us new
perspectives. This tenth-grade world history class was held in the smallest
room filmed anywhere in our survey, 30 feet by 30 feet, with an unusually small
class of six Native and nine White students. There were two Indian girls and
four Indian boys; the remainder were male Caucasians.
The teacher was friendly,
outgoing, and self-confident and appeared responsive to her students. The subject
of discussion was the Second World War. This should
have been a conversational class, but it seemed to fall into the conventions
already established in the schools at large: the teacher speaker, the student
listener-despite efforts made to overcome this convention.
The film opens with
a pleasant faced middle-aged woman standing in front of her desk answering
students’ questions about the ending of the film they
had been showed the day before.
“What happened at the end?”
“You mean yesterday?”
“Yeh.”
“Well, the British continued to resist. They didn’t give up. .
. .”
By size and seating this class is ideal for give-and-take conversation.
It is a question and answer class, and the tape records continuous talk by
teacher and students. But when the film is viewed we see some students
sitting silently throughout the session. A few vocal White students are doing
most of the responding. On film, many hands are raised, wagged enthusiastically,
but unrecognized, till arms would drop and bodies settle back into seats.
Is the teacher preferential? Or simply unable to handle this rush of two-way
communication?
The Indian girls never raised their hands. Many White boys raised
theirs, though often they simply spoke without asking. Two Indian boys raised
their
hands
but were not called on. One Indian boy in the front row did speak out eloquently
without raising his hand, but his facial expression was angry, and his physical
manner expressed defeat. He shook his head while speaking, then pursed his
lips, and dropped his arms leadenly.
Not all the White students were involved.
There were individuals who appeared as negative as any of the Indians. It was
important that there were White “Natives” as
well as Red Natives in this class. The Whites were covert in their rejection,
with rigid, sometimes angry or simply blank expressions, and gave no visible
signs of involvement. Their withdrawal was from school, whereas the Indians’ withdrawal
was also from the White world that is the school; hence their frustration
was more bitter.
The Indians began the class with a resigned restraint that
the girls carried through to the end. But as the period lengthened the Indian
boys’ expressed
increased discomfort, and their resignation changed to overt resentment.
Their manner fitted Harry Wolcott’s descriptive concept of the Indian
child as a prisoner of war held captive in the classroom (Wolcott 1969).
What can a prisoner of war learn from the enemy, the teacher? The Indian
boys in
the front row did not give up. They did not put their heads down on the desk
like the boy in the eighth-grade math class. Their withdrawal was anger and
militant distaste.
The view of the Anchorage schools gave perspective to the
tundra school in Bethel with its relaxed pace and unthreatening curriculum.
Intense effort
went into the Anchorage high school. The achieving drive, the pressure
of crowded
space with its dominating White pace could be an extreme hardship for the
Native student-and an insurmountable stress for many of them.
Were Native
children suffering because of inferior educational foundations? Or were we
observing an erosive process more pervasive than the schools
themselves? Could education offset this assault on personality? Or was
education the
fatal agent that brought the destruction? Our thoughts go back to the
tundra villages
for educational renewal. What might avert the Native failures suggested
in the urban school?
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