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VOLUME 8, ISSUE 1

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February 2-4, 2003
held in conjunction with the annual
Alaska Bilingual/Multicultural Education/Equity Conference
February 5-7, 2003
Anchorage, Alaska
The purpose of the Native Educators' Conference is to provide an opportunity for people engaged in education impacting Native people to come together and learn from each other's work and to explore ways to strengthen the links between education and the cultural well-being of indigenous people. Building on past themes, the theme for the 2003 NEC is "Keeping Our Roots Strong."

For further information, contact:

Virginia Ned
ANKN/UAF
PO Box 756730
Fairbanks, AK 99775-6730
907-474-2477 or 474-1902
Fax: 907-474-5615
fnvmn1@uaf.edu
www.ankn.uaf.edu

For information regarding the 29th Bilingual/Multicultural Education/Equity Conference, contact:

Melora Gaber, Program Manager
Title I/Migrant/Title III
Alaska Department of Education
and Early Development
801 W. 10th Street, Suite 200
Juneau, AK 99801-1894
907-465-8707
Fax: 907-465-3396.
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Hello, my name is Katie Bourdon and I'm the new Eskimo Heritage Program (EHP) Director for Kawerak, Inc. in Nome, Alaska. I am very happy to be in a position that works, preserves, develops and promotes our Native culture. I'm following a strong leader, Branson Tungiyan, who worked in EHP for over four years. I'm thankful to have open communication with Branson and am glad for his support.

The EHP program is fortunate to work so closely with our Elders as they are the guiding force behind EHP. Kawerak's Elders Advisory Committee have created long range goals and objectives that include procuring a cultural heritage center, continuing the documentation of Elders and culture and developing culturally-enhanced curriculum. The EHP has a wealth of recordings, slides, photos and videos that will be digitized for lifelong preservation and use. This is another major project that will take place this year.

I'm very delighted to be welcomed by the staff and family of the Alaska Rural Systemic Initiative. You are a very vibrant group with a strong mission and I'm glad Kawerak is a part of this dynamic, innovative strength of Native educators and leaders. I look forward to meeting all of you and creating a strong working relationship.

Finally, I would like to share some personal information about myself. I have four bright and lively children, three boys and one girl. My husband, Wilson Bourdon, and I have been married for 13 years. My parents are Frank and LaVonne Okleasik and Wilson's mother is Esther Bourdon, a very active Elder in Nome. His father, David Bourdon, passed away in 1997. We're happy to have so much family close to us as both Wilson and I have large families and most are living in Nome. Quyanna!
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Regional Coordinators:
Andy Hope, Southeast

Teri Schneier, Olga Pestrikoff,
Moses Dirks, Alutiiq/Unangaxˆ

John Angaiak, Yup'ik/Cup'ik

Katie Bourdon, Iñupiaq Region

Athabascan Region pending at
TCC

Lead Teachers:
Angela Lunda, Southeast

Teri Schneider/Olga Pestrikoff/
Moses Dirks, Alutiiq/Unangaxˆ

Esther Ilutsik, Yup'ik/Cup'ik

Bernadette Yaayuk Alvanna-
Stimpfle, Iñupiaq

Linda Green-Interior/Athabascan
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High School Summer Enrichment Program
WWAMI Biomedical Program, University of Alaska Anchorage
June 16-July 25, 2003
Would YOU like to become a DOCTOR?

WHAT IS U-DOC?
The Alaska U-DOC Program is a six-week intensive summer enrichment program for minority, rural and disadvantaged students who are interested in careers as medical doctors. U-DOC's goal is to foster, affirm and encourage high school students' interest in the medical profession by allowing them to further explore medical careers and to get a valuable introduction to college life. The University of Alaska Anchorage Biomedical Program (WWAMI) welcomes all eligible students to apply!

AM I ELIGIBLE?
In order to qualify you must:
* Be a U.S. citizens or permanent resident and a resident of Alaska
* Currently be attending your junior or senior year in high school (at the time of application)
* Belong to an under-represented minority group, live in a rural area, be a first-generation American or be economically disadvantaged

WHAT WILL I BE DOING IN THE U-DOC SUMMER PROGRAM?
* Getting a taste of college life
* Taking a pre-med curriculum overview
* Exploring medicine as a career
* Learning about biological, cultural and social forces that impact health and health care
* Gaining exposure to clinical medicine through a physician mentor

WHAT WILL I LEARN IN U-DOC?
* Basic sciences (anatomy, biology, chemistry, math), including laboratory experiences
* Computer skills, research skills
* Verbal and written communications skills
* Problem solving and test taking skills
* College survival skills
* How to be a competitive candidate for medical school, including MCAT practice and participation in mock interviews

WHAT ABOUT TRAVEL AND HOUSING?
* Travel assistance may be available for qualifying students.
* Housing will be available to qualifying students in the UAA dormitory facility.

WHAT ABOUT MY SUMMER JOB?
* Due to the program's demanding schedule, we require that students not hold jobs or participate in other programs from June 16-July 25.
* Each U-DOC student will receive a monetary stipend upon successful completion of the program.

HOW DO I APPLY?
The following items must be faxed or postmarked by Saturday, April 12, 2003:
* The completed U-DOC program application
* A sealed current official high school transcript (ask your counselor how to obtain yours)
* PSAT / SAT / ACT scores if available
* Two sealed letters of recommendation from teachers, at least one of which is from a science or math teacher

Acceptance will be based on high school academic performance, letters of recommendation, written responses to essay questions on the application form and a formal telephone interview.

FOR AN APPLICATION AND ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
For U-DOC application and reference forms, click on U-DOC at: www.uaa.alaska.edu/biomed.
Applications may also be obtained by writing or calling the Biomedical Program at:
U-DOC SUMMER PROGRAM / WWAMI Biomedical Program / University of Alaska Anchorage
3211 Providence Drive / Anchorage, AK 99508 / phone (907) 786-4789 / fax (907) 786-4700

OTHER QUESTIONS?
Contact U-DOC Program Director, Allison Butler, 907-786-4793, udoc@uaa.alaska.edu
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by Louellyn White (Mohawk), University of Arizona
This past summer I had the privilege of traveling to Alaska. The magnificent snow-capped peaks and abundance of lakes, rivers and shoreline were in sharp contrast to the Sonoran desert where I currently live. It was a welcome change and I had a truly amazing experience in the land where the sun never set. I was fortunate enough to be a student in the Cross-Cultural Studies summer course, "Cross-Cultural Orientation Program for Teachers" at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. The three-week course was geared toward teachers working in Alaska's rural villages.

I am not a schoolteacher in Alaska, but am a doctoral student in the American Indian Studies Program at the University of Arizona and have an interest in Native education. I wanted to know how programs like the Old Minto Cultural Camp help prepare teachers for working with Native students and was interested in how traditional knowledge is integrated into the curriculum of Alaska Native schools.

We spent the first and last weeks of the program in a classroom at UAF. Reading and discussing work by various scholars in the field of Alaska Native education helped prepare us for our week out at Old Minto. The work by Elders like Howard Luke and Peter John helped me understand how important subsistence, culture and language is to the lives of Alaska Native people.

Dorothy Titus and Louellyn White making birch bark baskets. Linda Charlie sits in the background.

However, there are some things that just cannot be taught in the classroom such as how to dig up spruce roots for basket making, how to pluck a duck and how to hunt for moose. How about hauling water from the Tanana River and bathing in a Yup'ik steam house? The Old Minto Cultural Camp gave us the opportunity to do these things side-by-side with the people of Minto and to experience living close to the land in the traditional Athabascan way.

We traveled to Old Minto by boat along the Tanana River from the town of Nenana. Old Minto is no longer permanently inhabited but serves as a cultural center for groups like ours, Elders' gatherings and youth camps. Our small class was joined by a large group of teachers and administrators from the Wind River Reservation in Wyoming and several other educators, youth and camp helpers. Days were filled with chopping wood, pounding nails, playing with children and learning about the Athabascan way of life. In a group effort, we even managed to build a fire circle shelter and saw it almost to completion.

One of the most important lessons I took from this experience was how important it is to listen to the Elders. I welcomed the opportunity to sit, be still and to just listen. They have an incredible wealth of knowledge about their history, culture and language. I spent hours listening to stories about the old times at Old Minto, learning about local plants and making birch bark baskets. The Elders shared their concerns about modern society's influence on youth and their loss of language. Some of the Elders are trying to combat the loss of language and culture by providing traditional teachings in local classrooms.

I envied the physical and spiritual strength of the Elders. Even though some of them had to rely on walking sticks and had lost some of their hearing and eyesight, they managed to not only get out to the remote camp by boat, but slept on spruce boughs and stayed up late telling us stories and singing traditional songs. For them, they were returning to their home, to a place where they had raised their children and buried their loved ones.

Towards the end of the week we were all busy preparing for the potlatch. For days we cooked duck soup over open fires, roasted beaver and cooked salmon. Finally on the day of the potlatch, people came throughout the day by boat from surrounding villages and the camp was bustling with activity. Families reunited, old friends returned, traditional songs filled the air and children danced along with the Elders. At the end of the traditional meal (which we served) speeches were made, thanks were given and people talked about their concerns regarding the education of their youth and of the need to have more Native teachers in the classrooms. Although there are many dedicated non-Native teachers, high teacher turnover rates along with inadequate understanding of Native cultures remains a problem in many parts of the country. This appears to be particularly problematic in Alaska's rural schools. Programs like those at Old Minto attempt to address these concerns.

The Old Minto Cultural Camp provided a unique example of how traditional knowledge and Elders play an important role in education. By teaching through their culture rather than about their culture, the people of Minto were able to provide participants with firsthand experiences in the Athabascan way of life. This experience required each of us to be open to new ways of doing things, to be respectful of others and to embrace the rare opportunity of living at an Athabascan fish camp.

I made many new friends at Old Minto and was sad to leave. This experience will stay with me for a very long time and I would like to thank all of the people at Old Minto for their hospitality and for their teachings. I would especially like to thank Ray Barnhardt and Robert Charlie, executive director of the Cultural Heritage and Education Institute, who made the camp possible. Thank you also to Dorothy Titus who reminded me to listen to the wisdom of the Elders. Since this experience I have often wondered what the world will be like when I reach the age of these Elders. Will anyone still live this close to the land? And perhaps most important, will people remember the teachings of the Elders? I certainly hope so.

The 2003 Cultural Orientation Program is scheduled for June 2-20 in Fairbanks and Old Minto. Enrollment information is available through the UAF Summer Sessions at http://www.uaf.edu/summer.
Roundhouse completion-sheltered fire circle-built by camp participants.
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The following resolution was adopted at the Thirty-Eighth Annual Convention of the Association of Village Council Presidents (AVCP). The convention was held in Bethel, Alaska, October 8-10, 2002.

Thirty-Eighth Annual Convention
Bethel, Alaska October 8-10, 2002
RESOLUTION NO: 02-10-13
TITLE: SUPPORTING ASSOCIATION OF VILLAGE COUNCIL PRESIDENTS SUBMITTED BY AVCP ALASKA RURAL SYSTEMIC INITIATIVE YUP'IK/CUP'IK HISTORY PROPOSAL AND AVCP TRIBAL COLLEGE

WHEREAS The Association of Village Council Presidents, Inc. (AVCP) is the recognized tribal organization and nonprofit Alaska Native regional corporation for its fifty-six member indigenous Native villages within Western Alaska and supports its member villages; and

WHEREAS AVCP fully supports its member villages' endeavors in all aspects of their self-determination, health and well-being; and

WHEREAS AVCP/Alaska Rural Systemic Initiative (AKRSI) and AVCP Tribal College propose to actively seek funding for the regional Yup'ik/Cup'ik history project within Western Alaska; and

WHEREAS the intent of the Yup'ik/Cup'ik history project is to make it part of the required school curriculum in Western Alaska schools; and

WHEREAS the regional Native students and their descendents need to know their origins in Western Alaska; and

NOWTHERE BE IT RESOLVED THAT the full board of the Association of Village Council Presidents supports and directs AVCP Administration to actively seek funding for the Western Alaska Yup'ik/Cup'ik history project and report to the AVCP administration and AVCP board periodically.

ADOPTED this 10th day of October 2002, at the 38th Annual Convention held in Bethel, Alaska, at which a duly constituted quorum of delegates was present.
By:___________________________________________________________
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Those of us associated with the Alaska Rural Systemic Initiative for the past seven years have been promoting the concept of culturally-responsive schools as a means to create systemic reform in Alaska's rural schools-especially those whose student populations are predominantly Alaska Native. Improved student academic achievement is the ultimate goal. We understand and believe that if we base teaching and schools on the local environment and culture, giving respect and credit to students and heritage, we can begin teaching at a higher level. We also understand and believe that students who have healthy self concepts are better learners.

What exactly does a "culturally-responsive school" look like? What would be happening in a culturally-responsive school that will be different?

Local Native Elders are prominent in every classroom and are regulars in the school throughout the day and school year . . .

Alaska Native Knowledge Network publications Alaska Standards for Culturally-Responsive Schools and Guidelines for Developing Culturally-Responsive Teachers for Alaska's Schools provide guidance for describing what we should find in culturally-responsive schools. Rather than go into all of the sections covered in the referenced publications I will share my version of what constitutes a culturally-responsive school by listing what I believe should be evident if I were visiting that school and the school community:
* Teachers and administrators would be those who were born and raised in the community or region.
* Local community has direct and significant input in the process and recommendations for hiring all school staff.
* School is named for a local cultural hero or leader and whose picture and contributions to the community and region are detailed in the pictorial presentation.
* Local cultural statement of values and beliefs are prominently displayed throughout the school.
* Behavioral standards for students are based on the values of the local culture and are developed with full participation of local parents, Elders and leaders.
* Classrooms display local cultural events and people and
* Local Native Elders are prominent in every classroom and are regulars in the school throughout the day and school year (celebrate Elders‚ birthdays in school.)
* Elders are accorded "dignitary" seats during important school functions (games, meetings, graduations, etc.)
* Local school's annual goals for students are prominently displayed.
* Teachers teach within the culture, not about the culture. Teachers utilize local environment, language and culture in developing and delivering lessons for students.
* The instructional program and curriculum includes:
- instruction in the local Native language
- local cultural history and a correct and complete Alaska history course that details how Alaska Natives have been recognized and treated as well as how they are now organized for cultural, political and economic reasons.
* Flexible/alternative instructional methods including regular classroom trips outside the school and incorporates the local environment.
* Process for reporting student academic progress includes options besides report cards (school academic fairs, highlighting student achievement during student basketball games, etc.)
* School calendar/daily schedule take into account the local community's cultural activities.
* ALL school staff are included in staff meetings and inservices.
* Administrators, teachers and other school staff learn and use local cultural language greetings and words for praise when working with students.
* The school's facilities are readily available to the local community when not in use for instruction or student activities (someone in the community has keys to the school.)
* Local school board meetings include regular reports by all of the classroom teachers, instructional support staff and maintenance personnel.
* Administrators/teachers attend all local village meetings including tribal councils, cultural celebrations, local holiday events, etc.
* Students learn and present plays and performances of local legends spoken in Native language, develop and wear traditional clothing with assistance from local cultural experts.
* Students translate reports and other activities into local language and present to Elders/community.
* Local community develops standards for students that would prepare them for participation in local cultural community, takes responsibility for and delivers instruction both within and outside school day. Students meeting these standards are recognized by village leaders during end-of-year graduation ceremonies.

These observations are really only a beginning of what could be developed for any local school and could be the beginning of a plan for a local school to become culturally responsive. We know, too, that some rural schools have developed their own list of culturally-responsive practices. It would be helpful for all of us if those components were shared with those schools wanting to become more culturally responsive.

For additional information on cultural standards' guidelines available through the Alaska Native Knowledge Network, contact Dixie Dayo, 474-5086, dixie.dayo@uaf.edu or visit our website at www.ankn.uaf.edu.
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by Cathy Rexford, North Slope Borough School District
According to the Alaska Department of Education and Early Development, as of the 2001-2002 school year, 459 of the 8,206 public school teachers are Alaska Native or
American Indian.

As indigenous societies that once maintained total control over the education of our youth, we find that our lack of professional presence in our contemporary education system creates a situation of loss. If we as Native people are to truly regain control of our education, it is necessary to infuse young Native professionals into our schools. Encouragement must be given to our young people to become certified teachers, administrators and linguists. Our need for teachers is great and should therefore be a priority in our Native education agenda. We need to invest not only our finances, but also our time and effort into getting our own people teaching in our schools.

The Future Alaska Native Educator (FANE) listserv currently includes 37 students and is growing each week. What started out as a mission to increase youth involvement in the many Alaska Native education gatherings, transformed into the organization of young Alaska Native educators. The intent of this statewide FANE electronic network, is to provide a forum to exchange information, advertise education events and issues and link these students to educators and education entities across Alaska. I compiled this list of Alaska Native college students majoring in education, after sending out several e-mail requests across the state.

I present the Sharing Our Pathways audience with an opportunity to provide these young people your professional and traditional mentorship. This is an excellent opportunity for young Alaska Natives who are on their way to becoming educators and it is also a good opportunity for us to include the ingenuity and the ideas from these young educators in our planning and strategizing. Their fresh perspective may just be the solution we are looking for to move our education agenda forward. These are the students who are preparing to assume responsibility to continue our work as Native educators.

Now that a growing number of young Alaska Native educators are assembled, what does the Alaska Native Educator community have to say to them? As Alaska's leading experts on education, please send your contributions for the FANE listserv to: Cathy.Rexford@nsbsd.org

If you are an aspiring Native educator and interested in being added to the list please e-mail Cathy at the above address as well.
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by Yaayuq Bernadette Alvanna-Stimpfle, Iñupiaq Lead Teacher
Last fall, the Bering Strait School District held their Third Annual Educational Conference from October 21-24. There were many workshops and meetings offered for all the participants from the fifteen sites within the region. It was exciting to see so many teachers coming together from the Bering Strait region.

On Tuesday, October 22 during the breakout sessions I facilitated two sessions on "Integrating Culturally-Responsive Standards." At both sessions I guided the participants in brainstorming on subsistence activities throughout each season. In the first group, there were enough participants to break up into smaller groups to help each other in preparing lessons. In each of the groups, it was suggested that we create a circular calendar listing the seasonal activities. Teachers can brainstorm with students and have them create a subsistence calendar. The illustration shows activities both groups came up with.

Suggested Activities for Implementation of Subsistence-based Curriculum
* Have students brainstorm what activities are happening in the community.
* Create a circular seasonal calendar to record and display traditional activities with these labels:

Early spring Summer
Early fall Late fall
Winter
* If possible, include the Native names of each season.
* Have students illustrate the calendar.
* Have students research and interview Elders or local experts.
* Compare and contrast traditional and modern subsistence activities.
* Create a website on the activities.
* Participate and get involved in the community activities.
* Invite guests for storytelling.
* Create and display student work.
* Hold a science fair on the research done by the students.

Assessment and Rubrics
* Teachers can create an assessment and a scoring guide for the projects.

Performance Assessment
* Hold a community night to display student work.

I know there are many activities I have left out from this list. Teachers can add them with their students. Both sessions I worked with were very good about sharing their activities and lessons.

Quyaana to all the participants who were part of the workshop during the BSSD Education Conference!

Related winter activities include trapping, hunting,
dog sledding, Native dancing and potluck
celebrations, storytelling, sewing parkas,
mukluks, mittens, slippers, ruffs
and carving with ivory, wood
or baleen. Sports-related
activities include basketball,
volleyball and wrestling.
Native games include
the World Eskimo
Indian Olympics
games such as the
High Kick and
Finger Pull.

Related fall activities
include ivory carving,
hunting, skin sewing,
knitting, weaving grass
baskets, ice fishing and
preparing for the winter
holidays. Some communities
can practice Native dancing and
children can do different sports
related to the curriculum (Native
games).

Related spring activities include
bear hunting, hunting out in
the sea ice, drying meat,
making seal oil and
preparing for summer
fish camp. Many
hours are spent
preparing and
putting away
dried foods.

Related summer
activities include
fishing, going
to fish camps
to prepare dried
salmon, picking various
greens, picnics, put away
dried fish and meat, store
edible greens and seal oil,
freeze berries for the winter.
Communities have their own
techniques to prepare salmon and
greens-have students research that in their
communities.
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How many of you have been out in nature fishing, picking berries, snow-shoeing, hiking, cross country skiing or just relaxing? What do you feel when you are out on the river, on the tundra or in the mountains?

Think of the time that you were away from the village or the city experiencing the interplay of light, air, snow and soil-just yourself wrapped up in your own thoughts. When first out there, what did you think about? Did your thoughts begin to absorb your immediate environment? What did you begin to notice? Tree, flower, ant, raven, mouse, moss, ptarmigan, ice, stream, hill? Do these things of Mother Earth have a right to be, to have life? Does the tree have a community of life? Yes, it stores water, the roots have bacteria, it nourishes insects, soil, undergrowth, humus-a living community! Does the mouse have a community? It has a house, food storage, spouse, children, connecting tunnels, time for play, protection, shelter-carrying out life as all living creatures do. You see all soil, rivers, mountains, lakes, trees, wolves, bears, amoeba, e. coli, lichen, red squirrels, camp robbers, caigluq, cranberries, salmonberries-they all live with us in a large community.

You and I, who go out to be in and with nature, should know how to bond with all forms of life. They have a right to be, to live! All things are like us in many ways-they process energy, grow, reproduce, face dangers and do their best when the conditions of their homes and place are most suited to their needs. To be out in nature is to feel that you are cleansing yourself and getting a joy that can arise from being in touch with natural things, the creations of Ellam Yua.

This feeling of family is the most powerful of human bonds! We have to realize that they share our home in the cosmos, eat at our table, share our air and water and play with our children. We are composed of their bodies and they of us. Each of us are here on earth for a very short time. We let others see us for a while then, as other things, we must recycle. We are all related!

When we really experience the joy of life we become more polite and kind to all in the vast community. Being with and in nature, we begin to build love and respect for all life. Love is probably the strongest force in our world! Why love? Because love of the world around us causes us to limit the demands we put on Mother Earth, how much we buy and sell, moderating our needs and wants. It is this love that will allow us to give up some things and begin to limit what we have.

When we build up this respect, love, kindness and politeness in being with nature, we will not have to rely on alcohol and other things that bend the mind, because we become balanced physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually. From such a balance will come joy in life.

Have a safe and happy holiday and new year!
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The anchor for any healthy society is culture: it determines behavior through traditional beliefs and observances; it also governs the life of the people. The foundation for any culture is language, the means of communication which ties the society together. For Alaska Natives, the last 95 years have been such an erosion of culture, cultural institutions and languages that the basis for Alaska Native societies has been undermined resulting in confusion, especially among the young.

Simplicity vs. Complexity
Our ancestors knew exactly what they wanted because they formed and communicated around the circle of life. This is why our Elders are knowledgeable in survival today. They acquired the knowledge by starving and experiencing hunger when the food was scarce. For us to analyze our cultures and our languages, whether they may be simple or complex, will open a thought system that will require high-level cognitive thinking skills. The documentation of our way of life has primarily been written by the outside educators and anthropologists. Where are the Cup'ik interpretations of what has been going on with our people? With that in mind, I will explain my concerns and aspirations for our own Native people of Alaska.

John Pingayak plays the drum in a classroom.

We usually try to make our immediate tasks simple so we can complete our goals one step at a time. We do not try to take on too many objectives at once that will lead to failure. In our Native ways we try to make things as simple as possible which may be why we do less talking and more nonverbal communications. Our way of life may look simple, but it is really complicated within our own philosophies of living.

Following our traditional values is simple when they are reinforced based on the training we have received at a very young age. Our language is simple when we are talked to in the same language from the time we're born. Our Elders practice repeating lessons and stories over and over again, yet they never say "It's boring." It is very important that we develop an outlook on life based on learning about our own ways and traditions. Respect and honor are used to acquire knowledge and wisdom. Nothing comes to us free-we have to work hard for everything. Just as our Elders tell us, laziness and sleepiness will become a poor way of living.

Influence of Dominant Society
I remember when I was a boy, I only knew Cup'ik and heard about all that my parents went through. My parents and their extended family used to spend all of their time trying to survive. The families spent their time in spring, summer and fall camps. I have experienced everything they went through, especially their subsistence way of life. Although men went to canneries in Bristol Bay, the influence of Western culture was not too great in those days. As a boy I used to wonder if we were the only race in the whole world. I would look to the horizon and wonder who would be alive, like me, beyond that horizon. Of course, I did not have aspirations like Columbus, but my frame of thought was on the same track. Since then, I have seen many other cultures way beyond my expectations. I have traveled to the Soviet Union twice, Brisbane, Australia, New Zealand and Fiji.

Today, my saddest experience is seeing my culture dying without enough effort and adequate solutions to revive it. I'm sorry to say, but most of the programs that deal with our own Native people are not working. Please let me explain. I have been like a broken record, telling everyone that programs are not working because we, the real people, are being overlooked to plan, administer and teach in those programs. Too many of our people are relying on state and federal government for welfare, health care, food stamps and energy assistance. Because of these kinds of outside assistance, our people are forgetting how to work for their own needs.

Self-Determination and Governance
We have not been allowed the chance to determine our own destiny. Most often, when self-determination and self-governance comes into play for our people, many of the federal and state leaders become uptight and do everything they can to block the efforts of our people through courts and legislation. We have not been allowed full power to take care of our own needs. When will that time come? Many of our problems exist because we appear helpless in acquiring the funds to run the programs. In order to run these programs that are vital to the existence of our people we need funding, but when we ask for funds we have to categorize our people as "high risk." How can our people heal if we are not considered fit to live and be like everybody else and have control over our own destiny?

Many years ago we never knew how to be business or corporate leaders or that we could be legislators, teachers, doctors and managers. Now we have awakened from a deep sleep and are beginning to realize that we can take care of it all. We have learned that we can determine our own way of life. We learned we can take over our schools. We learned we can govern ourselves without influence from the outside world. It is up to us to take our future into our own hands.

In this journey of our lives, we all need to start learning from each other. I have given you some of the negative aspects of our Cup'ik lives. Our way of life was a subsistence economy and now much of it has changed to a cash economy. Although our way of life has been influenced by the Western world, we still possess our traditional values, many of which are intended for all races. My Grandpa told me that no matter where we are, we are talking about the same concerns.

We still teach about our traditional tools and some of the traditional clothing in our schools. We are maintaining some of our physical cultural elements but the losing battle in maintaining our language. The only way it's going to survive is for our families to start speaking Cup'ik in our homes. The school can only provide supplementary support for language retention but it alone cannot take on the task to retain our language. Some villages are not too late to save their languages, though others have lost it completely. Our hope lies in those villages with strong Native languages that are being practiced by the young. It is up to us to take over some of these programs and practice being providers for our own people. We are slowly taking responsibility for our mistakes and reshaping the future for our younger generation.

I feel we have a lot to offer to the Western world-all we need is recognition that we are existing and struggling to survive as Cup'ik people in this modern era. I thank you for your support and may the force be with you!
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On November 11, 2002, approximately 50 people graciously sacrificed their holiday to participate in a Southeast Region Native Education Forum. The forum took place at Haa Kaak Has Kahídí (Our Uncle's House) in Juneau and was cosponsored by the Southeast Alaska Tribal College (SEATC) and the Southeast Alaska Native Educators Association (SEANEA).

The SEATC Elders Council was represented by Joe Hotch of Klukwan, Lydia George of Angoon, Arnold Booth of Metlakatla, Charles Natkong, Sr. of Hydaburg, along with Marie Olson, Nora Dauenhauer and Jim Walton of Juneau. The Elders panel also participated in a cultural orientation training seminar for new teachers at Adlersheim Lodge in Juneau on November 9. Plenary sessions took place at the beginning and end of the day.

Forum participants divided into four strands or working groups: K-12 Education facilitated by Paula Dybdahl of Juneau-Douglas High School and Angie Lunda of SEANEA; Higher Education facilitated by Rhonda Hickok of the University of Alaska Southeast/Preparing Indigenous Teachers for Alaska Schools; Adult Education facilitated by Andy Hope of SEATC/AKRSI; and Strategies for Engaging Native Families in Community Education facilitated by Dr. Bernice Tetpon.

The purpose of the forum was to encourage communication, to develop action plans and to ensure that Native educators were united and coordinated prior to the Second Native Education Summit scheduled for December 9-10, 2002 in Anchorage. The main product of the forum was a Southeast Alaska Native Education Resource Directory. This directory will contain short summaries of community-based education programs with contact information. This directory will be published in mid-December, 2002 and will be posted on the SEATC web page, which can be found at http://www.ankn.uaf.edu/seatc.

The Strategies for Engaging Native Families in Community Education group had extensive discussions on possible action plans and decided to focus on the following:

Goal #1
School board training on attracting, hiring (interviewing) and retaining Native staff.

Sub-goal
Increase support for returning Native scholars in villages. Support acceptance, hire and retention.

Goal #2
Education work on generational grief/historic trauma using wellness programs in Southeast.

Strategies
1. Training on generational grief/historic trauma/ affects of oppression.
2. Training on how to reclaim power for Native communities (de-colonization).

Goal #3
Implementation of cultural standards IMMEDIATELY!

Strategies
1. Provide educational staff with guiding principles of what Native parent involvement means, looks like and how to invite it.
2. Have the state school board insist on a plan from each district on how they intend to implement these standards.
3. Need a clearinghouse for curriculum, research, methods and materials for Native education by region.
4. Support for place-based education and assessment from the state school board.

The adult education group decided to focus on one achievable task, i.e. that the Southeast Alaska Adult Education Consortium should develop a database for tracking high school dropouts.

The other groups will concentrate on developing their resource directories. Follow-up meetings will take place in the next few months in partnership with other educational institutions. I would like to express my heartfelt gratitude to the people that took the time to participate in this forum. Thank you for working to improve educational opportunities in our communities.

The purpose of the forum was to encourage communication, to develop action plans and to ensure that Native educators were united and coordinated . . .
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UAF continues to offer an array of education (ED) and cross-cultural studies (CCS) courses each semester through its Cross-Regional Program. Students can obtain detailed information regarding enrollment in the following courses by going to http://www.dist-ed.uaf.edu/Education/Courses/Regional/Regional.html. For further information, contact the Center for Distance Education at raced@uaf.edu or 474-5353.

COURSE COURSE TITLE INSTRUCTOR TIME
CCS 602 Cultural & Intellectual Property Rights Marie Olson
CCS 603 Field Study Research Methods M. Hogan
CCS 612 Traditional Ecological Knowledge O Kawagley
CCS 690 Seminar in Cross-Cultural Studies M. Reyes Th 5:15-8:15
CCS 694 Place-Based Education John Carlson T 5:15-8:15
ED 110 Becoming a Teacher in the 21st Century Samson M 3:30-4:30
ED 110 Becoming a Teacher in the 21st Century Pennington W 3:30-4:30
ED 201 Intro to Education Ladegard T 3:30-5:00
ED 330 Assessment of Learning Freed W 3:30-5:00
ED 410 Foundations of Literacy Development Haugen Th 3:30-5:00
ED 420 Alaska Native Education (ANS 420) Kawagley T Th 3:30-4:45
ED 429 Computer Application in the Classroom Bradley M 3:30-5:00
ED 452 Elementary School Student Teaching Caldwell arranged
ED 477 Knowledge and Skills for Alaska Rural Educators Staff
ED 601 Introduction to Applied Social Science Research M Reyes M 5:15-8:15
ED 603 Field Study Research Methods Hogan W 5:15-8:15
ED 610 Education and Cultural Processes R Barnhardt arranged
ED 616 Education and Socio-Economic Change R Barnhardt Alternating Th
5:10-6:40
ED 621 Cultural Aspects of Language Acquisition Staff T 5:30-8:30
ED 631 Small Schools Curriculum Design R Barnhardt Alternating Th
5:10-6:40
ED 640 Gender and Education Hogan M 5:00-8:00
ED 660 Educational Administration in Cultural Perspective R Barnhardt arranged
ED 669 Reading Language and Culture
ED 670 Developing Literacy Haugen arranged
ED 671 Reading and Cognition Parker-Webster arranged
ED 684 Instruction & Assessment II Haugen Sat 8:30-3:00,
1/25, 2/22,
3/29, 4/19
ED 689 Proseminar in Applied Educational Research staff arranged
ED 690 Seminar in Cross Cultural Studies M Reyes Th 5:15-8:15
ED 694 Place Based Education Carlson T 5:15-8:15
ED 698 Master's Research Project Staff arranged
EDSE 482 Inclusive Classrooms for All Children Staff Th 5:10-6:40
EDSE 422 Curriculum and Strategies II: High Incidence Staff T Th 5:10-6:25
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When the Association of Unangan/Unangas Educators asked for the support of numerous volunteers in the communities of St. Paul, St. George, Atka, Nikolski, Unalaska, Akutan, King Cove, Sand Point, False Pass, Nelson Lagoon (not a traditional village but some Unangan live there) and Anchorage, we knew that some of these values would be mentioned but not how many would emerge nor what forms they would take.

The following are but two ways we have chosen to highlight the information shared by those discussing values from deep within the Unangaxˆ culture. The "Simple Instructions" allude to a relatively esoteric historical document, but bring longer scattered text to 27 succinct and teachable rules. The prayer by the beloved Father Michael Lestenkof (below) has served as an inspiration for many and a springboard for the very conversations that solicited the erudite wording of our enduring cultural values that have sustained us. We are grateful for the help of our partners around the state, nation and world who support one another to all become more mindful in teaching time-tested rules for living to our young people.

Barbara S¢varny´ Carlson
Association of Unangan/
Unangas Educators
VALUES
The Right Way to Live as an Unangaxˆ
Simple Instructions with the Long List
1. Udigdada. E / Udigida. W / Share.
2. Tutada. E & W / Listen.
3. Txin anguyni{ta}ulux. E / Txin manitalagada. W / Don't be boastful.
4. Agitaasitxin i{amnaasada. E /An}a}inas i}amanaasada. W /Be kind to other people.
5. Agitaasiin sismida. E / An}a}inas kiduda. W / Help others.
6. Tuman tana{ agliisaa{tan. E /Tana{ agliisada. W / Take care of the land.
7. Tuman ala}u{ agliisaa{tan. E /Ala}u{ agliisada. W / Take care of the sea/ocean.
8. Tuman taanga{ agliisaa{txin. E /Taanga{ haqayaasada. W / Take care of the water.
9. Manachin ilam axtalakan agliisaachin. E / Ana}is mal agumis ilam axtalagada. W / Do not do anything to excess.
10. Txin ugutada. E / Qa}atada. W /Be happy.
11. I}ayuu{txin, ana}im atxa}ingin agachan madada. E / Txin sakaa}atal ana}is mada. W / Behave yourself: Do the things you know are right.
12. Chxadalagaa{txin. E / Chxalagada. W / Don't steal.
13. Adluuda}i}ulux E / Adalulagada. W / Don't lie.
14. Ludakiim axtax samtaaxtxin. E / Ludaa}is, tukus ama uchiitilas sahnga{tada. W / Respect Elders (including parents, teachers and community members).
15. Agitaasiin samtasaa{txin. E /Agitaadaan sahnga{tada. W /Respect your peers.
16. Kayutuu{txin. E / Kayutuda. W /Be strong.
17. Agitaasiin matanangin imin gidu}iisalagaa{txin. E / Silaa txin gikuun alagada. W / Don't be envious of what belongs to another.
18. An}a}i{ i{amana{ i{talix kayux i{amana{ atxa{talix manaa imin ugutaasalix aa{txin. E / An}a}ina{ i}amanas manaa ngaan hi{tada. W / Admire one who does well by honest means.
19. Maamin i{tanatxin madada. E /Ana}is maamis hi{taqaan aguun mada. W / Don't make promises quickly, but keep those you make.
20. An}a}iisanatxin an}a}im agitaasingin agachan liidalix an}a}iisada. E / Matal an}a}iikaan agacha an}a}isada. W / Live like you want people to see you live.
21. Igilnaa{na{txin. E / Qaqatulagada. W / Don't be greedy.
22. Sla{, a}ada{, tugida{, kayux sdan tunum manginulux kugan i}ad}ulux. E / Sla{, a}adgi{, ama sdas hadangiin i}amana{ agacha tunu{taasada. W / Don't talk bad about the weather or the sun, the moon or the stars.
23. Agitaasaan adaan tunum i{amnanginulux i}ad}ulux. E /An}a}ina{ adalus hadaan hilgada}ulax. W / Don't slander another person.
24. Kadaan axtaa}ana{txin. E /Kadamis agalagada. W / Don't get ahead of yourself.
25. Adu{tanaan akidada. E / Adut akida. W / Pay your debts.
26. Qaqamii}u{. E / Qaqamii}u{. W /Subsistence.
27. Tunuun ugunu{talakan an}a}ii{txin. E / Unangam Tunuu ugunu{talagada. W / Don't forget your Unangan language.

Values of the Unangan/Unangas

Qawalangin / Nii}u}is Nii}u}is Eastern dialect / Western dialect
Kudalii}in maqa{takan txichin aguqangin / Kadaangis maqa{tal txichix
aguqangis
The way of our beginning, our ancestors
Udaadan tanangin kugan Unangan anangin / Udaadan Unangam
tanangin kugan anangis
Our people's land and sea around here
I{taqangin lulalix matalix an}a}iingin matakun / Hi{tanangis luulal ama
matal an}a}iingin matakus
Believe in them and keep them going through time
Aniqdun ngiin aqaa}an a}nangin qulingiin aku{ gumalgaku{. /
Kinguu}ingin wan slum kugan haqaa}an a}nangin qulaan aku{
gumalgaku{.
For the coming generations that we don't see yet, for their time here.
-Father Michael Lestenkoff
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In November, 2002 a working party on accreditation established by the World Indigenous Nations Higher Education Consortium (WINHEC) conducted a series of meetings in Albuquerque, New Mexico and Otaki, New Zealand to begin the process of developing an International Indigenous Higher Education Accreditation Authority (IIHEAA). The two meetings, consisting of representatives of indigenous peoples from around the world, produced a draft set of guiding principles which were approved by the WINHEC executive board to serve as a basis for constructing an indigenous education accreditation system.

The model criteria for an accreditation review around which much of the discussion revolved consisted of a higher education adaptation of the Alaska Standards for Culturally Responsive Schools, variations of which are to be developed by other indigenous peoples wishing to participate in the IIHEAA process. Following is a summary of the draft principles, around which a more detailed accreditation system will be developed.

Guiding Principles for WINHEC Accreditation Authority
Following are some of the guiding principles to be considered in the formation of an indigenous higher education accrediting system for implementation under the auspices of the World Indigenous Nations Higher Education Consortium.

The WINHEC Accreditation Authority will serve as a vehicle for strengthening and validating indigenous higher education institutions and programs based on standards and procedures developed and implemented by WINHEC member institutions.

The criteria for accreditation review will be founded upon the local indigenous language and cultural beliefs and practices that provide the epistemological and pedagogical basis for the institutions and programs under review.

The primary focus of the WINHEC Accreditation Authority will be the internal congruence and cultural integrity of the institutions/programs under review, with secondary consideration given to linkages with external/mainstream institutions and accreditation systems.

The WINHEC Accreditation Authority will provide a means for institution-level accreditation of indigenous-controlled higher education institutions, as well as program-level accreditation of indigenous-oriented programs within indigenous and mainstream institutions (including teacher education programs).

The accreditation review process will include the role of locally respected Elders and recognized cultural practitioners and the use of the heritage language(s) as reflected in the institution/program under review.

The WINHEC Accreditation Authority will promote indigenous research that is respectful of cultural and intellectual property rights and closely integrated with the communities being served.

The WINHEC Accreditation Authority self-study process will be guided by local cultural standards that are developed by the respective indigenous community and thus will provide international recognition and validation for educational initiatives grounded in indigenous world views, knowledge systems and ways of knowing.

The WINHEC Accreditation Authority will provide accredited institutions and programs with access to the following WINHEC services:

a. Each accredited institutional member shall have one vote on the WINHEC Accreditation Authority Board and shall be invited to participate in program reviews of other candidates for accreditation.
b. Each accredited member shall be included in the planning and implementation of cooperative activities (e.g., conferences, faculty/student exchanges, shared programs/curricula, cooperative research initiatives) of WINHEC programs and institutions.
c. Each accredited member shall have opportunities to enroll students in and contribute to the offerings associated with articulated international baccalaureate and graduate degree programs focusing on indigenous studies, including the acceptance of approved transfer credits among all member programs and institutions.
d. Accredited members shall have opportunities for faculty and students to form partnerships on joint research activities and to participate in faculty/student exchanges among member programs and institutions.
e. Accredited members shall have access to a database of recognized indigenous scholars for external review of research papers, theses, grant proposals, manuscripts, etc.
f. Accredited members shall be invited to participate in and contribute to international seminars, conferences, policy papers and comparable initiatives that pertain to the interests of the member programs and institutions.

Process for Implementation
Candidates for accreditation shall submit an application to the WINHEC Accreditation Authority and prepare a self-study addressing the criteria for review outlined in the Guidelines for Accreditation of Indigenous Higher Education Programs and Institutions.

The WINHEC Accreditation Authority shall appoint an accreditation review team made up of representatives from at least four member institutions/programs, two of which are from the same national context as the applicant institution/program. The review team shall include a minimum of one Elder who has been associated with a member program or institution.

The review team shall prepare a report based on a review of the self-study and an on-site visit to the candidate program/institution. This report (including the self-study) shall be submitted to the WINHEC Accreditation Authority for final consideration of membership approval.

Anyone wishing additional information or wishing to offer suggestions regarding WINHEC and the Accreditation Authority outlined above can contact Ray Barnhardt at ffrjb@uaf.edu.
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We welcome the Kuspuk Native Educator Association as one of our newest Native educator associations in the State of Alaska. They are in the process of developing bylaws and will be coming up with a distinguished name for the association from an indigenous cultural perspective.

A meeting of the Native educators (serving as the KSD Curriculum Committee on Cultural Standards) was held on November 16, 2002, called by Cheryl Jerabek, federal programs director and Peggy Wolfe, curriculum director of the Kuspuk School District. Also in attendance were Yup'ik Region Lead Teacher Esther Ilutsik and Kim Langton, KSD superintendent. In addition to exploring the idea of creating a local Native educators association, the committee addressed the development of cultural standards and the use of cultural thematic units. Following the formalities of the meeting and with support and encouragement from Superintendent Langton, the Native educators present unanimously voted to create a Native educators association. They elected the following interim board: Evelyn Chamberlain as president, who is a certified Native teacher from Crow Village Sam School in Chuathbaluk with about 40 students and four certified teachers serving the students; Julia Dorris as vice-president who comes from George Morgan Senior High School in Kalskag, where she co-teaches a cultural class with fellow board member Margaret Mute, instructional aide under the direction of Principal Jon Wehde with 86 students in levels 7-12; and Molly Sakar as secretary/treasurer who comes from Johnnie John Senior School in Crooked Creek where she teaches at the secondary level. Others serving on the interim board include Jon Berkeley, primary teacher at Auntie Mary Nicoli Elementary School; Anastasia Levi, primary teacher at Joseph and Olinga Gregory Elementary School in Upper Kalskag; Sally M. Hoffman who works at the Kuspuk district office providing school support; and Mary Groat, primary teacher who teaches at Zacker Levi Elementary in Lower Kalskag.

The Kuspuk School District covers over 12,000 square miles with a population of about 1,775 people. It includes the following villages: Upper Kalskag, Lower Kalskag, Crooked Creek, Chuathbaluk, Aniak, Red Devil, Stony River and Sleetmute. All these villages are accessible only by air and river travel. The district office is located in Aniak-the town the directly links the surrounding communities to the outside world.

We extend a welcome the Native educators of the Kuspuk School District and look forward to working with them.
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After seven years of writing books, curriculum materials and SOP articles for AKRSI, Alan Dick has started his own small publishing business operating out of Lime Village. The intent of the business is to enable other Alaskans to get their message or story into the hands of the public.

This business is geared towards the first-time author who knows little or nothing about publishing. Alan says he can step into and out of the sequence required to print books, giving the author the opportunity to save money by doing some of the tasks, yet Alan will help the new authors cross the hurdles that have kept hundreds of wonderful Alaskan stories from the public eye. Alan has been a successful author and now wants to share the experience with other Alaskans, particularly those from villages. For more information, email him at fnad@uaf.edu and check the SV Publishing website http://www.svpublishing.com. The website describes all the options available to first time authors. The AKRSI staff wish to express our appreciation to Alan for his dedicated efforts on behalf of village science, camps and fairs over the past seven years. His ability to bring science alive for students in just about any setting has been an inspiration to teachers throughout Alaska, and his Village Science and Village Math curriculum resources are some of the most popular items in the ANKN curriculum collection. We wish Alan the best in his new ventures and hope to find ways to keep him involved in his "calling" as the Science Wizard of Alaska.
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The following article was the keynote presentation at the 2003 Native Educators Conference banquet. Doreen was born in Barrow and is a student at the University of Alaska Anchorage.
We Iñupiaq are a nation of people occupying the circumpolar Arctic from Siberia through Alaska, Canada and Greenland. We share common values, language, culture and economic systems. Our culture has enabled us to survive and flourish for thousands of years in the Arctic where no other man or culture could. Among our entire international Iñupiaq community, we of the North Slope are the first Iñupiaq who have achieved true self-government with the formation of the North Slope Borough. We have the greatest opportunity to direct our own destiny as we have for the past millennia.

Conference participants gather on stage at the NEC banquet in Anchorage.

Possibly the greatest significance of home rule is that it enables us to regain control of the education of our children. For thousands of years, our traditional method of socializing our youth was the responsibility of the family and community.

From the first, visitors of the Arctic universally commented on the warm disposition of our children. Corporal punishment was absolutely unknown. Boys and girls began their education with their parents and, by the time they reached their teenage years, they had mastered the skills necessary to survive on the land. From that time forward the youth-with their family and within their community-devoted their education to their intellectual and social growth.

For 87 years, the BIA tried to destroy our culture through the education of our children. Those who would destroy our culture did not succeed. However, it was not without cost. Many of our people have suffered. We all know the social ills we endure today. Recently, I heard a member of the school personnel say that many of our Iñupiaq children have poor self-concepts. Is it any wonder, when the school systems fail to provide the Iñupiaq student with experiences which would build positive self-concepts, and the Iñupiaq language and culture are almost totally excluded?

My children and yours spend many hours in school each day, 180 days each year for 12 years. We must have teachers who will reflect and transmit our ideals and values. We must have Iñupiat-centered orientation in all areas of instruction. I do not want my children to learn that we were "discovered" by Columbus or Vitus Bering. I do not want to hear that we were barbaric or uncivilized. I do not want our children to feel inferior because their language and culture are different from those of their teacher. I do not want to see school planning surveys which list hunting, fishing, whaling or trapping as "social" or "recreational" activities.

The land claims movement and the self-determination attitude of the Alaska Natives were largely responsible for the removal of the suppression of our Native languages and culture. Bilingual instruction became the new education policy. However, this has generally meant that we use English as our primary language of instruction and somehow integrate Iñupiat into the curriculum.

The North Slope Borough schools must implement a program that is bilingual and bicultural. Our children must be taught in our Iñupiat language, with English as the secondary language. To attain this goal, we must have teachers who are bilingual and bicultural, knowledgeable in our Iñupiat culture and values. This can be achieved either with instructors who are Iñupiat or who have been trained in Iñupiat.

What can we do about this problem?
* We must develop a teacher recruitment and training program to satisfy our needs.
* Foremost we must encourage and train our own Iñupiaq to become teachers.
* Recruit responsive teachers who are willing to learn both the Iñupiat language and our cultural values.
* Train teachers and offer financial incentives to those who become proficient in our language and culture, in addition to Iñupiat history and ideologies.
* Evaluate current teachers to insure Iñupiat educational philosophies are being implemented.

Americans are beginning to assess their own values and finding them compatible with our own. We can now afford to be selective in our teachers. We should select teachers who are willing to become contributing members of the community. We must strive to break down the barrier between community and the school. Rather than being an integral part of the community, the schools and teacher housing resemble a colonial fort. We must end teacher segregation.

We must rid ourselves of these temporary residents who are here merely for financial gain. A number of teachers have already demonstrated their willingness to live among us as neighbors and friends. They have become permanent members of the community. They identify with us and share our concerns.

Our teachers are the highest paid teachers in the entire United States. What are we getting for our money? We should be able to hire the best bilingual-bicultural teachers in the world. We should have teachers who can teach well in Iñupiat schools. We should have the best schools in the nation, surpassing any of the elite prep schools in the east. We should have teachers who earn their keep by effectively teaching our children.

I feel certain that the school board members share my frustration and concerns. It is important to remember the lessons of the past. In addition, we must research and master the new changes if we are to continue to dominate the Arctic. We have demonstrated we can survive the trespasses which have been perpetrated upon us. We have been successful in establishing our own home-rule government. We have been able to achieve self-government. We must strive to insure that our borough, our city governments and our school systems reflect our Iñupiat ideals. We are Iñupiaq.

My name is Doreen Andersen Spear. My aaka, Rebecca Hopson, named me Maligian. My presentation this evening was a word-for-word recital of parts of a speech my aapa, Eben Hopson, Sr., gave on December 19, 1975 at the Teachers Affiliation Union's contracting meeting in Barrow. His words still ring true today. They mean so much to me. They are part of my roots and I keep them strong and alive by remembering them.

My aapa was the founding mayor of the North Slope Borough. He was denied a high school education by the BIA, which only motivated him to build high schools and improve the educational system on the North Slope. Now there is a middle school in Barrow named after him and a life-size statue with an inscription that reads, "Education is the key to success. Do not let anything stand in your way in your pursuit of education."

I'm a product of a racially mixed marriage. My dad, Ralph Andersen, is Yupik and Danish. My mom, Flossie Hopson Andersen is Iñupiat and English. I don't know much about my Yupik heritage, and I know nothing about my Danish and English roots. I claim my Alaska Native heritage. Barrow is the only home I know. I was born and raised there.

I have seen our Iñupiat culture start to lose its strength within the younger generations. Living among Iñupiat Elders is a life experience and to learn anything of my Iñupiat culture is dear to my heart. I do not speak Iñupiaq but this does not discourage me to learn more. As I grow older, my desire to acquire the knowledge of my Elders also grows. I only hope the younger generations also consider strengthening our culture-keeping our roots strong-as a priority.

From my earliest childhood memories my parents stressed the importance of education. They are both college graduates and are my role models. My mom and dad enrolled me in early childhood education when I was four years old. They also taught me the need to know my family, my culture and my roots. I know they are proud of me.

My mom and dad encouraged me to participate in bilingual and bicultural activities while I was growing up. Mom taught me some of my Iñupiaq language at home. I learned how to sing and motion dance in the Iñupiat way. But this does not make me any less proud of my other cultural roots.

I am only one person and I cannot represent those who chose not to learn about their Native traditions and Native heritage. I observed my peers who chose not to participate actively in bilingual and bicultural classes, dances and community activities. I was always curious why many parents did not encourage their children to learn their Native culture.

I like the theme for this conference-Keeping Our Roots Strong-because it made me really think hard about my roots and my generation in the context of education.

The formal education of Alaska Natives is a classic example of a clash between cultures. The values of the Western educational system of speaking, reading and writing in the English language and studying Western history, concepts and ideas, conflict with the values, beliefs and traditions of Alaska Natives. For generations, it was more important for our people to gather and harvest subsistence foods than it was to learn how to read and write English.

Educating Alaska Natives in the ways of Western society is a continuing problem today. Contributing factors include the lack of Alaska Native teachers, inadequate criteria and delivery of bilingual and bicultural curricula and students who are not taught their Alaska Native cultures at home.

Many of our people suffered physically and emotionally from being forced to not practice their cultures in school. They suffered corporal punishment for speaking their Native language and personal humiliation and embarrassment for not being able to speak the English language fluently and write it correctly.

Some Native students also had to leave their homes to attend BIA boarding schools when they were only small children in their middle school years. I can't even imagine what that must have been like. At the boarding schools, attempts were made to integrate them into the American mainstream with military living conditions and military rules. Many slowly lost touch with important parts of their traditional ways and beliefs and many lost their Native language.

Natives who were fortunate enough to complete their education returned home and had children of their own. Their situation was a frustrating dilemma. On one hand, they were not fully accepted by their people because they no longer spoke their language or were able to practice their cultural ways. On the other hand, they were not accepted by Western society because of their skin color. While many wanted to teach their children the ways and traditions of their ancestors, they simply could not.

My generation is facing a similar dilemma and problems with cultural identity. We feel pressures to advance and succeed in Western ways, yet keep solid footing in and strengthen our cultural roots. We face cultural identity issues and hard decisions.

Many, like me, are from mixed cultures. Which culture are we supposed to choose for the foundation of our lives? Is it wrong to choose one over another? Which roots do we keep strong without neglecting others? Will we be accused of favoring one culture over another when, in fact, combined together they make us who we are? Those are not new questions and there are no easy solutions. Your challenge as educators is to broaden our minds and vision to help us find answers.

The main barrier between the younger generations and our traditional cultures is an educational system that completely satisfies our cultural well being. I was involved in bilingual and bicultural studies and activities throughout elementary and high school. My formal education has led me to college, but I still lack the cultural knowledge of my ancestors.

In order for the younger generations to be great leaders, we must strive to be flexible enough to live in two worlds. We need to seriously consider our cultures to be the most important parts of our lives. We need the security to make important decisions to build the foundation for our lives. We need to pursue our educational dreams not only in the Western way, but to also gain the cultural knowledge and understanding of who we are and where we came from. We need to know what our roots are and we need to keep them alive so they can grow stronger. We need your help.

Thank you very much for inviting me to speak here this evening. Thank you, quyanakpak!
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Regional Coordinators:
Andy Hope, Southeast

Teri Schneider, Olga Pestrikoff,
Moses Dirks, Alutiiq/Unangaxˆ

John Angaiak, Yup'ik/Cup'ik

Katie Bourdon, Iñupiaq Region

Athabascan Region pending at TCC

Lead Teachers:
Angela Lunda, Southeast
Teri Schneider/Olga Pestrikoff/
Moses Dirks, Alutiiq/Unangaxˆ
Esther Ilutsik, Yup'ik/Cup'ik
Bernadette Yaayuk Alvanna-Stimpfle, Iñupiaq
Linda Green-Interior/Athabascan
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A student walks into the presentation room with sweat pouring down his brow from all the anxiety and excitement running through his body. Adrenaline shoots through his veins like a jet roaring off the runway. Silence fills the room until the young scientist is ready to present. The judges surround him and start asking questions that the student must answer to the best of his knowledge. Minutes seem like hours, but when it is all
said and done everyone, even the judges, come out of the room smiling.

On January 22-24, selected students from Chiniak, Danger Bay, Larsen Bay, Old Harbor and Ouzinkie came to Port Lions with science experiments to compete in the Fifth Annual Rural Regional Science Fair. The projects were judged on cultural knowledge by Elders and the scientific method by Kodiak scientists.

The fair was started by the Alaska Rural Systemic Initiative to recognize the connection between Native ways of knowing and Western science. Not only is it a great academic opportunity and a way to learn the scientific method, but as longtime coordinator Teri Schneider notes, "We are also seeing that the students are connecting their learning inside school with their learning outside school."

However, students learned more than just science this year. In addition to creating their own science fair projects, high school students in Port Lions were given another assignment: to host this year's science fair. They had to create information packets, dinner menus, plan evening activities, emergency water backup plans, schedules and more. "So many times people just take for granted that (Science Fair) just happens and that there is no planning that goes into it. So that's when we turned it over to the students," said teacher and principal Louis Martinez. This is all based on a survival class taught by Martinez and Donald Heckert. "We started talking about what it meant to run a shelter and so forth and we saw the science fair coming up and thought, 'what a perfect opportunity!'"

"I was happy when I heard that we would be organizing the science fair because we would get more interaction with the other kids," said Crystal Bartelson, a Port Lions student organizer. "I learned how hard it is for teachers and people arranging this (event). It is a lot of work!"

Young scientists in this year's science fair ranged from third grade all the way up to juniors in high school. Projects included parabolic dishes, mixing colors and weather, to more cultural projects such as Kodiak ducks, Alutiiq men's headwear and bow and drill techniques.

"The quality of this year's science fair projects were just outstanding!" said scientific judge Patrick Saltonstall.

Brady Travis' project on what types of soil erode quicker when introduced to water won grand prize for being best in both science and culture. "I learned a lot from this experience and I hope it will open doors for me in the future," says Travis. He now wants to get his commercial drivers license and work for the city of Chiniak, his hometown. Brady will be competing in the statewide Alaska Science and Engineering Fair April 4-6 in Anchorage.

First-place winner in the category of science, Ben Christman also of Chiniak, played different genres of music to chickens to see the effect on their egg laying production. He will be attending the statewide Alaska Science and Engineering Fair in April as well.

Old Harbor students Fawn Chya and Barbara Nestic won first place in the category of culture for their project on smoked fish. They tested different types of wood for smoking. They attended the Alaska Native Science and Engineering Society Fair held February 2-3 in Anchorage.

In addition to the science fair projects, there were workshops available to keep the students entertained as well as teach them more about how enjoyable science can be.

School district curriculum specialist, Sally Wilker, organized numerous science activities including dissection of owl pellets, color exploration and creation of polymers. While third through eighth graders dissected the small balls of fur and bones, it was clear they were learning; "There are two skulls here!" and "I found its ribs!" are just a couple of student exclamations. She presented the polymers to the high school students. A polymer is made of many particles or molecules that form into a long flexible chain. The students made polymers out of Elmers' glue, water and Borax.

Wilker also presented color explorations to the kindergarten through second grades; they used the three primary colors to make the secondary colors with Play-Doh.

Don Heckert, Port Lions math and science teacher, showed the chemical reactions of acids and bases using soda and peppermints. Students dropped peppermints into the bottle of soda, and the soda made a spout out of the top of the bottle. They were amazed by the reaction and learned the properties of acids and bases in the process.

Another presentation was put together by the Imaginarium. This family science center located in Anchorage provides hands-on experiments, assemblies and other scientific presentations to communities all over the state. This is the second year they have been part of the Regional Science Fair in Port Lions.

This year Amy VonDiest from the Imaginarium set up interactive exhibits in the Port Lions Tribal Building. Students and community members were able to test out different science activities such as solar power demos, fiber optic cables and laser lights.

"Thinking about the week," Louis Martinez said, "there were a few kinks, but that's because it was our first (student) run (science fair). I think we can look at this overall and say that it was really successful."
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