Alaskan Eskimo Education:
A Film Analysis of Cultural
Confrontation in the Schools
5/The classrooms on
film
TULUKSAK, AN ISOLATED BIA
SCHOOL
Tuluksak was the smallest and most remote Eskimo village
in our study. It had been selected because informants in the Chemawa
Boarding School in Oregon said it had more of the survival economies
than any other Kuskokwim village. I found upon arrival that there
was no winter trapping going on, except by the VISTA worker’s
Eskimo assistant. Most of the village was on some variety of
relief (which can he jeopardized by other sources of income)
and during
my winter visit there was literally no activity.
The BIA school
was a compound of two classrooms, cafeteria, adjoining multipurpose
room, dispensary, radio room, guest room, and quarters
for the teachers, whom we will call Mr. and Mrs. Pilot,1 since
the husband is an accomplished flyer. This couple had been teaching
in
Alaska twenty years and so might he considered representative
of the BIA school culture.
Lower Grades
Mrs. Pilot was in command of a neat, well-equipped,
and efficient classroom of about twenty students. The style of
teaching was
structured and very verbal. The teacher spoke distinctly
in a well-modulated
voice and kept the class going at a regimented pace. From
a conservative point of view, this was a very well-taught class
that should
inspire a budding student teacher and delight educational
superiors. Indeed,
Mrs. Pilot’s teaching was spoken of with admiration
up and down the river and in faraway Chemawa.
April and May
are bleak Arctic months on the Kuskokwim, but
much schoolroom decoration follows the seasons of the South.
Springtime
in the “Lower Forty-Eight” is the motif for this
bulletin board in the Tuluksak BIA school (below).
In response
to this verbal performance the students were
very quiet, though fidgety with what might be boredom or
withdrawal.
They were
well trained in their classroom roles, but looked a bit sleepy
and as students, would be called dull. The team judgment
describes the
class as overstructured and overtrained in proper behavior,
simply because there seemed no variation of behavior and
very little
spontaneous feedback from the students to the teacher or
to one another.
One variation in the class routine was filmed.
Once a week an old man from the village would come and tell
stories in
Eskimo.
On
this particular occasion the teacher set up the recorder
to tape the story
and then for a period left the room. Child-to-child communication
changed. While they were intently listening to the Eskimo
storyteller, the children formed a warm communicating group,
expressing
their acceptance of each other by body contact, hair caressing,
and
hand clasping.
Later the teacher brought in two Eskimo-made
models of forest hunting camps, complete with canoe, meat cache,
and forest
tools. The children
were immediately involved in the models. But when the teacher
took a pointer and began to ask questions, they reverted
to classroom routine and waited and watched the lecturing-questioning
of the
teacher. Apparently the questioning distracted them from
the
model
rather
than stimulating them to look into the model. For a few
moments the teacher’s aide questioned the students, and they
looked vividly at the model with considerable group communication.
During
my visit this Eskimo teacher’s aide usually remained
very quiet, standing back or simply handing material
to the class. I am sure she was much appreciated by Mrs. Pilot,
but
Mrs. Pilot’s
own style of teaching was so set that there was only
limited work of a serious kind for her aide to do. Occasionally
the Eskimo
aide
did take students into the cafeteria for special instruction.
But considering Mrs. Pilot’s teaching load in this two-room
multigrade school, where there certainly was need for a real teaching
assistant,
why weren’t these women teaching together? Because
the aide didn’t have a credential? Or was there
simply no academic place for a Native teacher in the
BIA school?
These questions will be probed
more deeply in our conclusions.
Mrs. Pilot went to great
effort to have a colorful, freshly decorated room in
keeping with the seasons. There were
spring motifs (even
in deep Arctic winter in the month of March) and child-play
images: a choo-choo train hauling a long load of alphabets,
a cutout
line of circus figures, a calf drinking from a bucket
of milk, a hoard
with a huge bumblebee, and cutouts on a pinup board of
the proper diet-Spanish rice, bread, butter, milk, and
gingerbread,
actually
the menu for the school lunch. These were gay images
of childhood, hut they were not for Arctic children not
Arctic
environment.
One of Mrs. Pilot’s survival lessons is not how
to keep from getting lost in a blizzard but how to obey
green and red stop-lights in Anchorage,
taught with a full-size, green-yellow-red stop sign.
The White school is dedicated to bringing modern knowledge
to Eskimos. Mrs. Pilot
was teaching White survival. Probably the only inadequacy
of this “survival
in Anchorage” lesson was the absence of a balancing
lesson on survival within the Native world-an area probably
outside Mrs.
Pilot’s cultural insights.
Visually the shortcoming
in this room was that there was generally only teacher-to-student
communication.
There
was no sense of
a circuit interrelating everyone. Instead, the teacher
was the center.
She
moved about constantly, sending messages to individual
students; But the students were as if alone in the room,
barely projecting
to the teacher and communicating with each other covertly
or not at all.
Culturally relevant learning of English
stimulated by a model of an Eskimo camp in the BIA school in Tuluksak.
Even
this able and punctilious teacher did not manage to ruin on this
classroom. Yet, of all the BIA teachers
in
our sample,
Mrs. Pilot had the most interaction with her village
and had genuine
friendships with various Eskimo women. She was ambitious for her students to excel, while at the same time
discouraged about
Tuluksak and the future of her students. We can surmise
that despite
the fact that Mrs. Pilot was an outstanding teacher
in her own style, this did not appear to support the Eskimos’ style,
and that the students became much too uncommunicative and at
the same time
unreceptive.
Some time later I had occasion to film
free-play in the village, and there was spontaneity and spirited
behavior.
The low
pace of the classroom was replaced with delight and
intensity.
Upper Grades
Mr. Pilot directed his class with equally seasoned
professionalism. He appeared to have reduced education
to its rudiments
and leaned heavily on workbooks, which is not unreasonable
in
a mixed-graded
classroom. His manner was gentle, quiet, and limited
in verbal messages. He moved about the room constantly,
briefly
answering
questions and
correcting faults. In a quiet way he exerted his discipline,
and the classroom was as structured as the first-through-fourth.
He
was very relaxed and his students equally relaxed.
The research team
described this behavior as sleepy. The team feels
the students and teacher are just going through
the motions.
Actually
this quiet teacher may have been giving more than
the film reveals
in-terms
of education.
The walls of the classroom do reflect
Alaska. There
was a poster with samples of all fur-bearing
animals, pelts
glued
on with
the proper names of the animals. Above the blackboard
were cutouts of Alaskan animals and a fleet of
snowmobiles. Mr. Pilot is a
flyer,
hunter, and gunsmith, and probably the older boys
relate to him on
these skills. At least this was one bridge, and
the eighth-grade students seemed genuinely involved
in
their tasks.
But despite these shared interests,
the teacher stands aloof. He rarely sits down with
his students
and
usually is in a
state of
motion. Our data sheets record little direct
evidence of student-teacher relations, and it was observed
that the
workbook lessons seemed
to
require very few responses.
Despite evident competence,
here also was a chasm with but a slender bridge- hunting and a
flyer’s
involvement with the ecology-with a sense of great air space between
teacher and student. Communication
signals were very limited. The students did not
watch the teacher or signal eye responses to the teacher. They
did relate in a nonverbal
way to one another; as one observer noted, they “yawned
in unison.”
Why was there so little to show
for the human warmth of this school? Mrs. Pilot’s
kitchen door was always open, and women were
often stopping to chat or have coffee with her.
She was always simple and
cordial and warm. In the evenings she helped
run a weekly bingo game for the interested mothers
and regularly held advisory school board
meetings. In one meeting she stressed that soon
the BIA might give up its educational function
and the village might be expected to
run its own school through a school board. Yet
in the same meeting she read a long letter from
the superintendent of BIA education asking
whether the community wanted Native teachers.
She presented the question by assuring them that
there were not enough accredited Native teachers,
so that if they wanted Native teachers they would
have an unaccredited
school. Since the majority agreed they did not
want an unaccredited school, this amounted to
not asking for Native teachers.
Had there been
a formal path through the jungle of bureaucracy
to practical goals of ethnic and
ecological
survival
education, certainly
teachers like Mr. and Mrs. Pilot would teach
toward such goals. We have described how Mrs.
Pilot did
bring an
Eskimo storyteller
into
the classroom. She made him very welcome and
taped his Eskimo tales, which showed her appreciation
of Eskimo
stories she
could not even
understand. With explicit sanction from above,
maybe many bush teachers would begin reaching
out
to Native
teachers
on many
levels of content
and skill.
Hovering in the background of the dedicated
efforts to these two career bush teachers is the couple’s
shared conviction that there is little future for tiny Tuluksak
simply because
dollars and
affluence are sweeping Alaska and somehow this
progress spells doom for Eskimo communities. In a silent way maybe
Tuluksak Natives feel
this also, and so together teachers and students
do not have much future to work toward. If there were a realistic
future, probably
these two teachers would change spontaneously
the style of their teaching.
The Tuluksak case was one of the most
baffling of our Eskimo study because of the ineffectiveness
of
the
human potential
of this teaching
team; Mr. and Mrs. Pilot deserved their reputation
as outstanding teachers, but still the school
appeared failing
the community.
What was critically needed may be genuinely
beyond the present intent
and resources of the BIA or any White-administered
Eskimo school. Education for Native welfare-missing
from this
school as from
so many others- is inextricably involved with
the conflict between two cultures and life
styles.
Tuluksak is a community, but is its BIA school
a community school? Is the lethargy of the
community related to
the pace of the school;
or is the school the effect of the community?
If it were a community school, what could it
do for
an underdeveloped
community?
The community force in Tuluksak now
is the Moravian lay minister, an Eskimo from the Kuskokwim
Bay
region on
the Bering Sea.
His efforts of community development are
expressed in compulsive church attendance
and study of the Bible. The BIA school appears
in conflict with
this church leader, and he has been reported
to discourage community actions
by the school. Hence the school on one very
important level is isolated from the community.
In a similar
way the VISTA
worker
also ran into
conflict with the church and found that his community program was quietly ignored by
the village-to
a point where the
VISTA worker
just sat alone in his cabin. As already stated,
this is not always the case with BIA village
schools; occasionally they
have added
to the community welfare in positive ways-though
likely by circumnavigating BIA isolationism.
I
revisited Tuluksak on May 3, just on the eve of the river breakup,
indeed on the very
last
ski plane.
The
world was
pools of melting
snow, and great cakes of ice were beginning
to move toward the sea. The silent winter
village had sprung
to life
as more and
more navigable
water opened up along the village shore.
Everywhere boats were being caulked, outboard
motors repaired,
nets mended,
a canoe
re-covered. Muskrat season was about to
begin. Salmon fishing was weeks away.
Everywhere children ran, danced, played
marbles with young and old, played baseball, hovered
around the
water edge
watching winter go
out. Boats were finally launched in the
limited clear water and
motors began roaring as Eskimos raced up
and down “to shake loose
the ice.” At this season it was hard
to believe Tuluksak was doomed or had a low
ebb of vitality at all. There was fire in
Eskimo
cheeks and sparkle in their eyes. How could
there be a dull school in the midst of such
vitality?
1 Descriptive code names have been devised to
help the reader recall the many different characters in our drama.
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