1/Perspectives
THE CHALLENGE OF ESKIMO EDUCATION
The potential of an Eskimo future.
Education for Indians and Eskimos is part
of a century of effort to place them successfully in the mainstream of
American life. The federal effort to educate Indians was a treaty obligation
born
out of the Indian wars and the Plains Indians’ final defeat at the
massacre of Wounded Knee. It seemed not unreasonable at that time to consider
education
as a terminal experience that would close the history of the Native American.1
But
the Natives have not been assimilated, not have they vanished. Rather,
they have rapidly increased their number and are now a fast growing minority
in the United States. Indians have demonstrated the need to be Indians,
to be themselves, and even today this continues to be a perplexing problem
in
schools and acculturation in general. Too often education has resulted
in conflicts demanding extreme personality change. For this reason, among
others, Indian education has continued to be a negative experience.
Education
for Native Americans is a controversial issue because-despite millions spent
by federal, state, and public schools, and by the churches-Indian students
too often appear less equal than ever before, as personal fulfillment
becomes increasingly difficult in modern society. Generally schooling has
not opened
pathways to equal opportunity, psychologically or economically, for
these culturally different students. Rather, the quality of their education
has placed thousands
of Native Americans on relief and many thousands more in the ghettos
of cities-far too many. In a shocking way, the more they go to school, it
seems,
the less
effective they become as human beings.
How should the White society
educate the Red or Brown American? In search of an answer the U.S. Office
of Education funded a National
Study of American
Indian Education, in an eleventh hour effort to salvage Native American
education and to assist teachers in this task wherever Indians are
in school. The film
study of Eskimo schools was one unit of the National Study.
Under
the direction of Robert J. Havighurst of the University of Chicago, the National
Study conducted an extensive survey, with regional
reams
all over
the United States following the same program of testing instruments
and scheduled interviewing.2 Anthropologist
and educator John Connelly, of San Francisco
State College, was contracted as regional director for the Northwest
Coast and Alaska. Connelly invited me to add a visual dimension
to his evaluation
by film research. It was hoped that this direct observational study
would qualify the more abstract verbalized findings of the formal
analysis.
The fieldwork was carried out in the spring of 1969, largely
in the area of Bethel, an air hub and trading center on the Kuskokwim
River
in West
Central Alaska. Here in the tundra along the winding waterways
of the Kuskokwim the
Eskimos live in many tiny fishing communities, each with its
community elementary school operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Neat
one village a Moravian
Mission ran a children’s home and their own eight-grade
school. In Bethel itself the consolidated elementary and high
schools were
operated by the State
of Alaska. While Connelly and his assistants, Ray and Carol Barnhardt,
concentrated on the larger schools in Bethel, I began my film
study in the remote river
villages, then moved in to Bethel, and finally to the municipal
public schools of Alaska’s largest city, Anchorage-covering
more than forty educational situations and collecting for analysis
some twenty hours of classroom
film data.
The purpose of the film study was to track the well-being
of Eskimo children through all varieties of school environments
of this region-mission
schools,
BIA schools, state schools, city public schools. In the following
year the film data was systematically analyzed and evaluated
by a team of
four San
Francisco State College students and graduates with training
in both education and visual
anthropology. A final report, combining their judgments, my own
judgments, and my empirical field experience, was submitted to
the U.S. Office
of Education, and the bulk of this material has been incorporated
into this book.
Perhaps I should have gone north with no preconceived
ideas about Native education, but this was not the case with me nor with
most of the members
of the National
Study teams. Though my knowledge of Eskimos was limited, I
had experienced years of interaction with policies of the Bureau
of Indian Affairs
(BIA) and Indian education in other areas. Earlier fieldwork
on the Navajo, and
more
recently a study of Indians relocated in the San Francisco
Bay Area, had already raised in my mind serious questions about education
for
culturally
different
children. This certainly affected my research and directed
my observations, indeed may even have weighted my view. Critically
I was observing
within an anthropological frame of reference and checking on
many circumstances
of education
with which I was already familiar. Further, I had come north
from eight years of seminar experience with college students
working
for teaching
credentials,
so I was bringing to my focus not only problems of Indian education
but the challenge of American education in general. As I filmed,
questioned, and
listened, I was seeking answers for many problems and clarification
for many dilemmas
that have generally confounded education across cultures.
Also,
I came north with the belief that there is success in Indian education,
though it may be less easily defined than
the more
pervasive failure. I was
seeking a fulfilling classroom where positive and additive
learning took place. Such a model could offer teachers a
foundation point
for adapting
learning
for the culturally different. The first and basic question
was: What developments might be needed in Indian education?
I hoped
some fine
teachers would show
me these needs. Beyond what teachers could demonstrate, I
wanted to broaden the focus of the challenge away from conventional
goals and
standards into the emotional and cultural considerations which might lie
far beyond the common expectation of what makes a school effective.
It is native
to our American system to believe that success can be measured in monetary
and technological accomplishment,
and
that dollar-rich
budgets
can relieve the basic problems of deprivation. An equally
spontaneous approach has been to find villains and scapegoats.
For years
critics have pommeled
what they considered “inferior” teachers and
decried the material poverty of Indian schools. What if
our study found the schools
excellently
equipped
by contemporary standards and the teachers both dedicated
and well trained? What if we found that the best equipped
schools and teachers fared no
better or worse than physically drab, ill-equipped schools
with minimally trained
teachers? What would we face then? We were alerted that
the issue might not be the professionality of the education
provided,
but the kind of
education and the kind of practices followed in teaching
the emotionally and intellectually
different Native child.
To appreciate how I filmed and what
I observed in Eskimo schools, we should share together
what I feel is the significant
relationship
between
culture
and learning, for this relationship is the major focus
of this book. An important view I share with many colleagues
is that
there is a
great difference
between schooling and education. As Robert Roessel, first
director of the culturally determined Rough Rock Demonstration
School
on the Navajo,
puts
it, “Education
is everything that takes place in life.” Schooling
is a limited aspect of the learning experience. With this
view, conceivably the larger
and
often the most important education takes place before school,
continuously outside of school, and long after school. A powerful education
can be obtained with no school at all. In a lifetime experience
with Indians in the Southwest,
I
have been impressed by the acuteness and intellectual effectiveness
of unschooled Pueblo and Navajo Indians, who often respond
to complex modern
legalistic challenges with more grasp than school-trained
Indians. Does this suggest that
Indian children can lose intelligence by going to schools?
Or is it simply very difficult to use Indian intelligence
in White programs? Throughout
this study, total education rather than the interlude of
schooling is the large
concern. We want to know how schooling affects education,
additively or subtractively. In the same reference we are
concerned with how schools
affect learning and
the development of intelligence.
California schoolteachers
frequently view their Indian students as unintelligent
or retarded. This impression
may have a
basis of accuracy,
for certainly
many Indian students perform at a low level. The question
the anthropologist must
raise is: Do they enter school retarded, or do they become
retarded through schooling? One of the casualties of acculturation,
moving
from one system
of values to another, is that effective intelligence can be left behind.
An anthropological view of intelligence
is that it is both learned and expressed within a cultural system. Ruth Benedict
(1934)
refers to this
phenomenon
as the “language of culture,” through which
man develops, communicates, and solves his life problems.
The cultural language is the total communication
of group-shared values, beliefs, and verbal and nonverbal
language. The intelligence of the Native child must
be observed in this communication context. Behavior
outside one’s own system can appear unintelligent.
It is generally accepted that much of basic intelligence
is formed in early childhood
within a
particular environmental program. Acuteness of mind rests
within the first language, and the initial intelligence
rests upon experiences in the first environment, whether
that be desert, jungle, or Arctic snow. From this is
born
the resourcefulness
and intellectual vigor
that we hope will be the equipment of the child as he
grows. This presents the dilemma that it may be difficult
and
sometimes impossible
to utilize
full intelligence except within the cultural system that
nurtured the child. It
is this challenge that presents crosscultural education
as a
conflict between cultures, deeply involving the personality
and culture
of both teachers
and students.
In this perspective, effective education
could be the degree of harmony between the students’ culturally
and environmentally acquired intelligence, and the learning
opportunities and the intelligence-developing procedures
and goals
of the school. Reasonably, if significant conflict lies
between Eskimo processes and the school, some variety
of educational failure must be expected. Teachers
may be seen reaching ideally with the flow of Native
intelligence, or teaching negatively against the Native
stream of consciousness. Granted, these are subtle
energies, but they are there to be utilized or ignored,
and they may well make the difference between a motivated
or a “turned-off” classroom.
Western life
style and technology have drastically altered the Eskimos’ relation
to the Arctic, as indeed they have altered indigenous
life throughout the world. Realistically then, what should
be the goals of schools in
preparing
Natives
to survive in drastic and rapid change? Can schools offer
needed new skills to cope with modern economic survival
without weakening essential
Native
learning for success in the Arctic environment?
Because
historically education for Native Americans was essentially
the conflict waged to change the Indians
into White men,
I was prepared to see stress
which often places the Native child in conflict with
his own personality-stress resulting
either from failure in mastering the school culture
and hence failure in the teachers eyes, or stress from success
in mastering
White
style. Successful
White education could become the double bind that leaves
the child in a chasm between two worlds.
A significant
question is: What is success in the eyes of the White educators?
Relocation away from the village?
Partial
or complete
rejection of Eskimo
self? Are students often left in the traumatic confusion
which
may be associated with disorganized change? Workers in
the field of Indian
education have long
been concerned over the high dropout rare, among Indian
students, and the later
inability to cope with modern cultural and economic life.
Other ethnic minorities, notably Spanish-American children,
respond
in similar
ways to comparable circumstances. I was equally concerned
about this confusion
of
personality
which seemed to freeze effective development.
Do White
teachers of Eskimos limit further the resources of their students by their
attitudes toward the Eskimo
life style?
White
people in Alaska
are heard to say, “The villages have lost their
economic function. There is no future for a bright
well-educated Eskimo boy in the villages.” Is
the intelligence of the child locked significantly
into the vitality of his village and the Arctic life
style,
so that if we condemn the villages,
we are
also rejecting the emotional well-being of the child,
in school and out? In this light, is White education
a support or an assault upon Eskimo
vitality?
Can we consider well-being in education without considering
the solidarity of Eskimo life in the Arctic? Is there
no place for Eskimo culture in
modern survival education? Where and how could Eskimo
skills be incorporated into
the schools?
White education on the Navajo Reservation,
whether missionary or BIA, has in the past consistently
rejected
Navajo-ness
from the
schools, as if to
say, “Hang
your culture outside, and take a shower before you
come to class!” Even
today the first step in a BIA kindergarten school on
the Navajo is to strip the clothes off the youngsters
and soap them down before they are allowed in
the classroom. However hygenic this may sound, and
however economically practical the White teachers’ dim
view of the Eskimo village may be, both reject symbolically
and conceptually the Native children from the White
education
in the school. Let us be very clear: I am not talking
about any single
kind of school-missionary, BIA, state, or public. We
are simply discussing and observing
what is happening to Native children in White schools.
Ironically, comparable rejections affect many White
children, as well as other ethnic minorities
in American education.
Traveling north my plane left
Seattle and flew over four hours of snowbound wilderness.
Surely the far
Arctic
is the outpost
of the
American continent.
Here we could observe again the historic contact of
modern White culture with ancient people, the Eskimos.
The wilderness
was
vast beyond any
of my conceptions.
Schools were dots on the tundra; villages, clustered
dots by frozen rivers or coastlines. But when I entered
the
village classrooms, I sensed that
I had not traveled far. Here was the familiar conflict,
the distance that frequently
isolates teacher from students. I was immediately impressed
that there were aspects of the Eskimo classroom that
were shared
with
the inner-city
schools
or the Spanish-American schools in the Southwest. In
greater dimension,
I sensed I was witnessing the conflict involved in
the westernization of ancient
societies,
or of affluent American education’s attempts
to communicate with and ideally to “uplift” students
from poverty’s community. The
Eskimo world has been called the ghetto of the north,
or in the words of Edward Kennedy as reported in the
Anchorage press, “the Appalachia of the Arctic.” How
pervasive is this view? Are teachers able to break
away from this ethnocentricity and educate Eskimos
as Eskimos?
Intrinsically this book is a report of “White
Studies” for
Brown students, and the hardships and frustrations
of administering such a curriculum
laid down by culture-bound White values. I approached
the Eskimo world as an isolated microcosm where the
familiar circumstance of the crosscultural
dilemma
might be observed and its simplicity might offer fresh
insights that would be useful to the Hong Kong Chinese
immigrants in San Francisco
as well
as to the Eskimos and the American Indians.
Our queries
may appear to go beyond the scope of our film data
of Eskimo classrooms. Factually stated, they
certainly
do.
But the drama
in these
classrooms goes
far beyond the teachers’ fulfillment of their
professional roles. To give justice to the efforts
and the generosities of these men and women, I
feel the real challenge of their assignments must be
appreciated. Positive education for Native Americans
has baffled educators for decades. Brilliant
schemes have been introduced and millions of dollars
spent, with small return. I approached my Eskimo classrooms
with this perspective, and all that
has been written is toward appreciating the scope of
the challenge. The landscape of education I am trying
to describe is particularly critical for
Eskimo and Indian students, but the dilemma is shared
with all children who are different-Red, Brown, Yellow,
Black, or White. Basically the challenge
is the right to be one’s own self, whether this
be the personality of a single individual, or the collective
personality of a group. I move forward
in this writing, as I did in the field experience itself,
seeking an educational definition that offers people,
no matter how different from others, a productive
place in the modern world. I write with conviction
that not only are people and peoples inherently unique
but that civilization is enriched and tempered
by this diversified vitality. I see Native education
(and there are Natives everywhere among us) as utilizing
multitudes of cultural energies without which
a free and equal world may never be formed. The pages
to come describe the varied effort of many teachers
to deal with this challenge. The descriptions
of classrooms will share with you questions that remain
unresolved: Why are we educating Eskimo students? Why
do well-trained teachers so often choose
to teach in the lonely school posts of Eskimo villages?
And if Eskimos were genuinely offered equal educational
opportunity, what would be the content
of this experience?
FLIGHT THROUGH TIME AND SPACE
My
winter departure from civilization and modernity of
the “Lower Forty-Eight” was from Seattle-Tacoma
International Airport. Flight northward was toward
the Arctic frontier where symbolically man’s
survival still is within the grip of nature. Flight
into the Arctic winter dusk from Juneau to Anchorage
is surely over
nature’s domain-no track of road, no human sign,
hour after hour of tundra land, icebound shorelines,
and treeless mountain ranges. But this expanse,
north to the Arctic Ocean, is the home of 53,000 Eskimos,
Indians, and Aleuts, scattered over a half million
square miles of tundra and forestland. It was
hard to conceive of modern enterprise emerging out
of this wilderness. It was hard to imagine man’s
living at all in such bleakness!
But in a few minutes
I would be arriving at the city of Anchorage. Mountains
suddenly leveled, and in the
distance
was an impossible
blaze of lights-the
city. The lights fanned out in a maze of brilliance.
Ahead were the homes of 40,000 White men and an estimated
5,000
Native Alaskans.
The plane
was lowering
fast. The wilderness was scattered. Blinking neon signs,
red and blue, and ribbons of car headlights illuminated
tall buildings
and
windows
of tiny
homes. Suddenly the wilderness that had been majestic
and timeless seemed fragile.
Only a few decades ago Anchorage had been a railroad
construction camp. Now Anchorage was any small American
city that had
grown too fast.
Gaudy bars,
secondhand car lots, and glass-encased, self-consciously
modern buildings, with piles of dirty snow. Sharply
dressed men, girls
in miniskirts
despite the cold, American construction men in boots,
fur caps, and cowboy hats.
Here and there a Native-Eskimo women picking their
way with care in sealskin mukluks,
quiet Indian faces drifting along, bright eyes of a
few Native children, oblivious to the modern pace and
mechanization.
Here was a model
of what American know-how
could do with the Arctic wilderness. As in any American
city,
cars
streamed by, grinding the winter into black asphalt.
Multitudes came in by plane,
but as many more came in cars from California and Oklahoma-campers,
trailers, wagons,
sport cars. The wilderness was broken by the Alaskan
Highway and by the constant air streams flowing to
and from the “Lower Forty-Eight,” Europe,
and Japan.
My second journey through time was from Anchorage
to Bethel, a western trading center on the second largest
river in
Alaska, the
Kuskokwim,
which flows
from the mountainous interior to the Bering Sea. The
city of Bethel-would it be
ablaze like Anchorage? Wien Consolidated Airlines canceled
the morning flight: snow. Nature had intruded!
The flight
to Bethel was into an Arctic wind and flurries of snow. The plane interior
was shabby with use. Freight
was lashed
down
where passenger sears
had been. An all-Eskimo detachment of National Guardsmen
climbed aboard, on their way home to villages after
a training period
near Anchorage.
They were
heavily dressed in snow packs, army parkas, and ear-flap
caps. They filled the plane with gentle laughter
and pressed their
noses against
the windows
as we angled upward in a deafening burst of jet engines.
We
circled for altitude, leveled westward as Anchorage began shrinking, and
finally disappeared in the grandeur
of desolate
white peaks.
The wilderness
closed beneath me again. No trails, no sight of
man. For the next two hours it was incomprehensible that
we would
see man
again;
but we would,
the
miracle would happen, and out of nowhere would
come the small city of Bethel.
When our plane crossed the peaks of the Kilbuck
Range, a hundred miles inland from the sea, we
were over
the tundra lands of
the Kuskokwim. As we descended
to land at Bethel, we came in low over the river
that meandered west in tortuous coils between dark
shorelines
of willow
and spruce. There
were
trails of
men here! Lines of sled and Sno-Go (snowmobile)
trails up
and down the frozen river
to villages near and very far, located on the river
banks or on equally coiled river tributaries. Here
the river
Eskimos have thrived
with
a precarious balance of fish, berries, rabbits,
ducks, caribou, moose, bear, and an
occasional
seal
swimming from the sea. The Eskimo villages were
here when the
first White
man came two centuries ago. How much longer will
they remain? Along with our Eskimo
passengers were Army officers and city-dressed
men with galoshes, overcoats
and attaché cases. Why do they come? What
schemes are in their heads? The very vacuum of
the wilderness seems to draw White men into
the Arctic,
each a messenger, like myself, from the modern
world.
After experiencing Anchorage, the emptiness
of the Arctic seemed deceptive.. How rapidly it
was
overrun
in three
years in the
Gold Rush! And now
oil, minerals, and civil and military aeronautics.
The air highway to Europe
leads over the
North Pole. And every square mile of the wilderness
is contended for as a potential sportsman’s
paradise, which covets every salmon, polar bear,
and moose. Modern men change nature and, of course,
the lives
of
the Native people. Change
them into what?
Wing flaps down for landing. Sno-Go
and sled tracks below us converged on the straggled
river front
settlement of Bethel, a scattered
mass of black
buildings
sending up plumes of steam. Bethel was not like
Anchorage yet.
Bethel is principally an airport
center for western Alaska, a defense base left from World War II,
still with the
helterskelter look
of a habitation
of hastily thrown-up buildings and Quonset huts.
Bethel is an
Eskimo city, for
Bethel is the hub of a score of Eskimo villages
located 5 to 80 miles east and west along the
Kuskokwim waterways.
But Bethel
is
also a
bridgehead of
modernity in the tundra. I felt I had stepped
back in history, for Anchorage was such a bridgehead
for White
enterprise
fifty years
ago. But nature still
holds Bethel in her grip! No water system, no
sewage. Water is purchased by the barrel, and human waste
removed by
the
bucketful.
In the schools
in Anchorage
7 percent of the students are Natives, but here
in Bethel the consolidated elementary and high
schools
are dominated
by an
85-percent Eskimo
student body. Bethel is an Eskimo city. Would
the White invasion tip the balance
of this
culture? Soon?
Bethel is an island in the tundra
with barely twenty miles of roads. But cars moved grotesquely
through
its streets,
past Eskimos
on
snowmobiles and
masses
of Natives and Whites walking over frozen roads
to and from the Post Office, the state liquor
store, and three
major
trading posts that
straggled along
the river. Below river pilings teams of sled
dogs were tethered, wailing and barking while
the Eskimo
owners
traded or just
visited
in the metropolis.
Icy
winds blew up and down the river or across
the desolate
tundra, driving against long squirrel and muskrat
skin parkas of
the Eskimo women,
or against the
surplus Air Force high-altitude clothing popular
with so many Eskimo men.
My third journey back
in time was from Bethel to the isolated village of Tuluksak that lay
eighty
miles
eastward up river
on a tributary
of the
Kuskokwim. Seattle
to Anchorage to Bethel and now to journey’s
end, Tuluksak. Air wings had become smaller,
a single-engine bush plane, equipped with
skis and
loaded with parcels and freight. Village
landings would be on river ice.
We gained
very little altitude and flew eastward across
the loops and bends of the Kuskokwim River,
following, as it were, the multitude of sled
trails
with
now and then
the tiny shapes of a dog team coming or going
from Bethel. Twenty minutes later the plane
dropped down even closer. Tuluksak lay ahead,
pointed
out by the
pilot. Tuluksak is a village of the tundra,
another dot on the map of Alaska, a black
design of tiny dwellings, where one hundred
and fifty
Eskimos,
one White VISTA worker, and two White teachers
survived together through
the winter
isolation.
The plane settled down for a ski
landing on the river ice. Log and frame dwellings
flashed
by,
the bright
buildings of the Bureau
of
Indian Affairs
school, the
steeple of the Moravian church. Dark winter-clad
villagers descended the snow banks of the
river to the metal
bird that links the
village to the world.
Mail,
relief checks, newspapers, a hundred pounds
of dog food. And I, the stranger, descended
to the
river
ice; another
White
man had
arrived.
Eskimo children
helped me with my gear, and I entered the
village world amid wild barking of staked-out
sled
dogs.
Journey’s end was this village
along a small frozen river. There was a tiny
Native store, an even smaller post office,
a white and green
painted
Moravian church, and clusters of log and
frame houses that loosely formed a village
square or fronted on meandering pathways
leading along the
high rivet
banks. Aside from the barking sled dogs it
was very quiet. A few figures emerged, disappeared,
or reentered dwellings. A village asleep
in the
Arctic half light.
Further beyond lay the BIA school compound,
discrete from the tiny log houses of the
village.
The village of Kwethluk, twice the
size of Tuluksak, has electric lights,
a brightly
painted BIA school,
a Moravian
church, and
a Russian
Orthodox
church.
Why had I come? Why had the lone
young man VISTA worker come? Why had the BIA
teachers,
man and
wife, come
and remained
teaching in the Arctic
for
twenty
years? White teachers first came to the
Kuskokwim to change Eskimos into Christians.
I came
to observe how
White education
affects
the Eskimos. But
we all came,
in our separate ways, because we considered
the Eskimos in deprivation. The missionary
teachers
came because
they believed
the Eskimos
had no concept
of the soul. The BIA had sent teachers
because they found the Eskimos
unhygienic and inept in mastering White
ways. The VISTA worker came because he
believed
the village low in modern skills and
community enterprise. I also came over anxiety about
skills-skills either
not taught in the
White school
or blocked
by the White school by interfering with
Native survival learning of how to live
in the Arctic
ecology. My
concern was whether
education was helping
Eskimos
live in the real world as Eskimos. But
as an observer and an evaluator, I came
as a
White
man like a
hundred others
who
at
one time or
another have
descended
on this tiny dot of a village called
Tuluksak.
How far back in time was this village?
At what point in Eskimo destiny was White
education
attempting to meet the
village’s need? Here
my study of Eskimo education began-in
the most remote village in a two-teacher
school
in a community reputedly involved in
the subsistence survival of the Arctic.
I was dropping in from the skies into
two centuries of aboriginal-White
contact culminating in Eskimo survival
today. Within this history was the BIA
school,
built close on the edge of Tuluksak.
I
was impressed with the human warmth and
skill of the BIA teachers when I
entered
the Tuluksak
classroom.
The
first-,
second-, third-,
and fourth-grade
classroom was a very cheerful room decorated
with bright prints of farm animals and
cutouts of paper
flowers.
The room was
wonderfully clean
and orderly;
the children, cheerful and well-behaved
if a bit sleepy. The teacher moved about
the
room, gently
prodding or
encouraging, speaking
in
a clear and
friendly voice. The school was exceptionally
well-equipped for a rural village of
a 150 people. There were bright toys,
White dolls,
modern trucks,
and a full library of children’s
books. I remembered seeing equally well-equipped
new schools on the Navajo Reservation,
where I had also
worked with some
very dedicated teachers.
For many reasons
this well-run school was a baffling place
to begin observing
educational
processes
that were, in
many eyes,
failing
the needs of Native
students. The teachers, living in their
well-run home in the same building as
the classrooms,
were skilled
in their
style
of life,
but even on
first contact appeared far removed from
the lifeway of even the most modern
Eskimos of this
remote village. All that I could note
down from this first visit was that the
school
compound
was a confrontation
with Eskimo
life. Was
there anything
wrong with this? Isn’t education
generally a confrontation? Certainly
I would have been bewildered if this
mature couple were trying to live
like Eskimos. Instead these teachers
were sincerely being themselves and living
the properly fed and housed White style
that suited their personality
and background.
Two years and several
months later I still feel evaluating
Tuluksak baffling
on an
immediate classroom teacher-to-student
relationship.
It is difficult
to write about this school without
first considering the total context of the
White confrontation
with the Eskimo.
To evaluate
education
for Eskimos,
I find
I must consider the total history and
drive of
White intruders, which include myself,
and more than two
centuries of Western
influence on Native life.
We must weigh the actualities that
have been imposed on Native survival
over the
centuries of White contact. If we can
do this we might conceive of a modern
Eskimo
and the
world
in which
he could survive
now. A distortion
of the educational
dilemma could occur when we lose this
whole view. What the teachers were
giving their
students in Tuluksak was real,
but maybe only
one part of the
real that
Eskimos need to survive now. Before
traveling further we should pause to look at the
history and the
emerging ethnography
of
the Kuskokwim
Eskimos,
or we
may be unable to see the many silent
dimensions of this well-run White school.
1 The word “Indians” includes many distinct cultural
groups; sometimes I will use it to include Eskimos as well, particularly when
speaking of experiences all these groups share.
2 Estelle Fuchs and Dr. Havighurst have just
published a comprehensive report on the study, To Live on This Earth. American
Indian Education, New York: Doubleday. Copies of regional reports and final
reports presented to the U.S. Office of Education are available from ERIC (Educational
Resources Information Center, Bureau of Research, U.S. Office of Education).