Cross-Cultural Issues in
Alaskan Education
Vol. II
PROMISES TO KEEP
Mark Kuhn and Wendy Rosen Esmailka
Center for Cross-Cultural Studies
University of Alaska, Fairbanks
(Ed. note: This article was originally
presented at the 40th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied
Anthropology, Denver, March 22, 1980. All rights are reserved by the
authors, and
quotations may not be made without the written consent of the authors.)
For
the first time in the history of formal schooling in Alaska, Alaskan
Natives have become a viable presence in the schools in
roles as certificated
teachers. To an equally important, albeit different, degree Alaskan
Natives are now participating in educational policy decisions
as members of locally elected school boards and village advisory school
boards.
The struggle to gain authentic control of their children’s
education is one that involves multifaceted efforts. Future successes
in these
efforts depend to a measurable extent on a particular role of
a Native teacher. Becoming a classroom teacher and receiving
the official sanction
that accompanies certification are the initial steps; the subsequent
step is at least as important, although it has received scant
attention. Specifically, it is crucial that a Native teacher
be allowed and encouraged
to develop his or her own teaching style in order that Native
students receive the total benefits from the Native teacher’s
presence. Research about a Native teacher’s impact on village
school education is limited. However, it seems probable that
the development of a Native
teacher’s individual teaching style is currently encumbered
by institutional structures and constraints, community images
and sanctions,
and the limitations of the teacher’s own educational past.
A
Native teacher’s presence in the classroom is a recent
phenomenon, currently limited to only about four percent of the
total number of
Alaskan teachers. Therefore, it would be premature to evaluate
the ramifications in a precise manner, except for some of the
most obvious
advantages and disadvantages.
Undoubtedly, we can assume that
there will be qualitative changes in the classroom experiences
of Alaskan Native children who have
Alaskan
Native teachers. However, an examination into the nature of these
changes seems to reveal some limitations on major changes that
can occur under
present conditions. The potential that the introduction and utilization
of Alaskan Native teachers holds is somewhat tempered by the
structural characteristics of the schools, their curricula, and
the school
districts that will employ the teachers. Compounding this is
the teacher’s
own experience as a student, and in some cases, as a former employee.
The mere presence of a Native will not effect the changes necessary
to attain complementary and responsive schools for the villages
in rural Alaska.
Although more Alaskan Native teachers are being
hired, the indigenous language is being used in some instructional
instances, and the
subject matter has changed slightly, the schools are essentially
the same as they were preceding Native teacher employment. Nor
have the
cultural and social organization of the school, the acculturation
and assimilation of children, or the organization and priority
of valuable
knowledge changed significantly. As the history of Alaskan Natives’ education
demonstrates, schools play more of a part in shaping the future
than simply providing a means to learning literacy skills (Holthaus
and Collins, 1973; Darnell, 1979).
Rural Alaskan schools did not
evolve naturally from the needs of the residents, the parents,
or the children who were to attend
the schools.
Instead, the schools were organized and controlled by non-Native
people who often attempted to “civilize” the Natives.
The patterns established in Alaskan schools are similar to those
established
for other Native Americans in that they contributed to the destruction
and disruption of the social fabric of the cultures.
Patterns
of life changed as Alaskan Natives settled into permanent village
sites to be near the schools and then adapted their subsistence
lifestyles accordingly. Few of the “benefits” of
American education were ever achieved. Instead, Native languages
were denied
in the school: this sometimes led to a total or near total replacement
of English in the community. Valuable subsistence and survival
skills, formerly taught by family members during what was now
the “school
day,” became superseded by school work.
Currently there
are cosmetic changes in the curriculum, a limited use of indigenous
languages, and an allowance for Native teachers
to portray
the “artifacts” of their cultures in bilingual/bicultural
classes. However, in order to change bilingual/bicultural classrooms
(in this instance, we mean any classroom where most participants
are of a culture different from the dominant culture), it would
be
helpful to examine just where culture reveals itself in the classroom.
In so doing, the areas where a discrepancy can occur between
the culture of the school and the culture of the community may
be determined.
The most visible area where culture manifests itself
is in the subject matter of the curriculum. This visibility makes
it the
ideal area
for change and revision. Conversely, this feature also makes
it easier to promote only surface adjustments. As “bilingual/bicultural” curricula
and various subject areas integrate the artifacts of the local
culture into their educational program to better reflect the
local physical environment, there is little attention paid to
functions of
curricula other than transmitting facts.
The skills and knowledge
the educational organization chooses to convey to the students
are linked to the school’s socio-cultural environment.
The school determines the essential body of knowledge that will
theoretically prepare the student for the future. Inseparable
from this is the socialization
process the student learns, which, ideally, prepares the student
for a role in society. It has been pointed out that the school
is a microcosm
of the wider society that reflects the norms and values of the
world beyond school (Lightfoot, 1978). This is achieved, at least
in part,
through structural arrangements and the promotion of appropriate
behavior patterns within the school. The school setting provides
conditions that are not available in other settings so that the
experiences can
lead to acquisition of the society’s norms and values.
American schools have changed their structure and the behaviors
promoted within
it to meet the roles that are required to fit into an industrial
system (Bowles, 1972).
A number of norms have been identified
as having particular relevance to the economic and political
participation in industrial societies
(Dreeben, 1967). Independence is one of them, i.e., learning
to do things on one’s own, being self-reliant, being subject
to the scrutiny of an authority figure. Another one is achievement,
i.e.,
being competitive, working to master a situation, and working
to change and adapt the environment rather than accepting it
fatalistically.
Placing individuals into categories; having them do the same
task at the same time; and confining their interests to the task
at
hand, are some others. Children participate in these norms at
school, and schools contribute to the emergence of these norms
in the child
(Dreeben, 1967). An Alaskan village school, having a curriculum
and a structure that is similar (if not identical) to a mainstream
American
school, results in socializing children into a society and culture
that does not yet exist for them.
The social and cultural setting
of an Eskimo or Indian village in Alaska differs from the suburban,
urban, and rural communities
of mainstream America. There are differences in size, accessibility,
economic
base, housing, language, social organization, and cultural values,
among others, if a school’s characteristics reflect the
society in which it exists, then a village school’s characteristics
should reflect the norms and values of the village: the behavior
and social structure within the school should complement the
culture beyond
its walls. Quite obviously they do not. This is reminiscent of
continual struggle experienced by other minority groups within
the United
States.
There are many areas in the classroom where culture plays
a major role in determining the required mode of behavior. These
can
lead to a discrepancy
and conflict between the home, community, and the school. From
a larger perspective, this discrepancy can be seen in how a classroom
is organized, i.e., in the ways children are permitted to interact
with each other, to make decisions, to solve problems, and the
style of learning that is encouraged in the classroom (Barnhardt,
1980).
These factors can have a direct correlation to whether a student
succeeds, based on the cultural orientation that child brings
to the classroom
and the classroom’s receptiveness and utilization of that
background or the opposition and rejection of that orientation
(Cockerham and
Blevins, 1976). The discrepancy also exists in the ways that
a teacher expects a child to act within the classroom context
and is inextricably
linked to that child’s successful negotiation of the many
interactions that occur daily. Some of these have been perceived
in preferred modes
of sharing; working well with others; being fair; settling disputes;
learning standards of work performance; cooperation; mutual assistance;
and punishment (Sieber, 1979). All of these, plus the many others
that flow from them, are culture-bound in their connotation of
what is “acting right” in that situation.
Alaskan
Native children, moving back and forth between school and home,
may know what to do or what is expected of them given
a set
of circumstances.
However, the solution may conflict between home and school, and
a difficult choice must be made. The values of the school system
do
not originate
with the consent and participation of the parents. In fact, it
was not until the past five years that Native parents were even
provided
with formal means to influence the school.
One might expect that
many of these interactional differences would be eliminated, or at
least minimized, with the advent of
Native teachers. Current research that examines classrooms
in which all
participants are Alaskan Natives should analyze potential teacher/student
congruencies
that may be occurring subliminal ly to the current classroom
structure of interactions (Barnhardt, 1981).
However, Alaskan
Native teachers also are caught between the preferred values and
goals of the community and those of the
school. Native
teachers are required to implement the curriculum and organize
the classroom
and daily schedule appropriately -- in a sense to “buy
into” the
brand of discipline and behavior espoused by the school and
other teachers, In some cases, Native teachers are rejected
by individuals within the
community for having “sold out” to the system.
A
Native teacher is usually one of the first people within
a village community to graduate from a college or university
and
stay in
the village to work, and he or she is subsequently under
close scrutiny
by school personnel and community members. Perhaps more critically,
the school and community watch very carefully for evidence
of “good
teaching,” possibly to a much greater extent than they
scrutinize those teachers who come from “outside.” Local
teachers who have grown up in the village or surrounding
area have been
acclimated to the inherent village socialization status.
They are more attuned to the subtleties and intricacies of
the village social system
and, consequently, are subject to the prevailing temper and
mood.
A Native teacher is measured against a “good” Caucasian
teacher (and often measures her or himself against such a
criteria). But who are these models of “good” teachers?
The only available models are non-Native teachers, who are
often unfamiliar with
and insensitive to the mores and communicative styles of
the village. Such “model” teachers are implicitly,
at best, espousing the values and practices of mainstream
America. As this “good
teacher” role is carried out by a Native teacher, however
unconsciously, it may serve to negate the styles and natural
practices of that individual. Furthermore, what may be acceptable
from a
non-Native teacher may be totally reprehensible from a Native
teacher who should “know better.” As the Native
teacher adapts to the “good” teacher’s
behavioral patterns, the differences in classroom teaching
practices become increasingly
less noticeable.
There are, of course, differences -- particularly
in the area of interaction between teacher and students.
Research
outside
of Alaska
has demonstrated
that differences in cultural background and orientation may
interfere with efficient classroom learning (Philips, 1972).
When the teacher
and students come from the same culture, there naturally
will be improvements in the quality of the interaction that
takes
place,
ultimately resulting
in enhanced quality of students’ learning. Limited
research that has been conducted (in Alaska) in the past
few years substantiates
this (Collier, 1973; Scollon and Scollon, 1979; McNabb, 1979).
These studies show direct parallels to Native Americans’ situations
in the “lower 48.” However, the scope of this
paper cannot adequately cover the breadth of that topic.
What we can say is that
a combination of Native teachers and Native students should
help to decrease cultural miscommunication which is so often
translated
as the student’s lack of understanding, disrespect
and resistance, or a lack of motivation on the part of Native
children in the presence
of a non-Native teacher.
Although such interactional dissonance
will be substantially reduced, there is much that inhibits
a Native teacher from
teaching according
to his or her own methods. The perceptions as to what should
occur in school are often shaped by what schools have done
in the past
and the ambiguous definitions for “school teacher.” The
collective educational past of a community, in conjunction
with the teacher’s
own past, has been shown to exert a powerful influence on
people who are establishing their own school systems after
a long period of outside
influence and colonial rule (Kimball, 1974).
School administration
also does its part to insure the continuation of the status
quo by consistently reinforcing the process
that most teachers go through before they even enter the
classroom.
Typically, the Native teacher has first been hired as an
aide, possibly as a
bilingual instructor, and then has matriculated from a teacher
education program. Finally, the new teacher must pass an
interview for the
job.
This teacher is usually a “safe bet” to fit into
the total school program and conform to all of the normative
behaviors shaped
by the non-Native teaching staff.
Socialization of a new teacher
into acceptable teaching behavior patterns is carried out
by members of the school staff. Interestingly
enough,
many Alaskan Native teachers have been trained almost exclusively
in alternative methods for rural cross-cultural classrooms.
Although they
originally seemed to agree that such methods might be more
appropriate for village schools, once they began teaching,
Native teachers
reverted back to the traditional methods currently in use.
This is, of course,
a typical response for beginning teachers. The pressures
on a new teacher to behave in ways congruent with the established
role of
the “good
teacher” is very difficult to resist (McPherson, 1972).
The critical point here is that this new teacher has a cultural
heritage and cultural
background that is distinctly different from her or his non-Native
counterparts and predecessors. It is difficult for a Native
teacher to withstand these pressures and proceed with responsible
teaching.
Any rural Alaskan teacher’s role, simply stated,
is to prepare Native students to live a productive life within
the village at present
and in the future. This acquisition of skills is complicated
for Native students because it requires skills to deal with
continued infringement
as well as skills for commuting back and forth from the rural
areas to the regional and urban centers. Specific literacy
skills and knowledge,
a recognition of cultural differences, and a strong background
in the students’ own cultural heritage are but the
bare minimum for survival. Other skills, equally as important
but as yet unspecified,
must be taught in the schools in order to guarantee the self-determination
of Native peoples in Alaska. To date, few school districts
have even begun to ask the question as to what these skills
might be. There only
have been surface attempts to talk with community members
about this issue. Native teachers, trained in alternative
curricula, potentially
are in a strong position to help determine exactly which
skills might be necessary for the future. Such decisions
need not create radical
deviations from the current curricula but can supplement
and enhance the curricula to make them more responsive to
current needs in rural
Alaska.
For the vast majority of the schools in rural Alaska,
there has been a rapid increase in the demand for standardized,
district-wide curricula. As the Rural Educational Attendance
Areas (which
emerged
in 1976) are becoming more established, curriculum developers
and administrators are seeking unified texts and curricula
for all
grades.
Such curricula
are often based on linear learning and require little teacher
preparation time, limited teacher instruction, extensive
recordkeeping, and
the breaking down of subject areas into segmented pieces
which, theoretically,
can be easily measured. These changes have sometimes resulted
from a belief that Indian and Eskimo children are culturally,
socially,
and academically disadvantaged, and that structured curricula
will somehow compensate. This theory, too prominent in schools
with
minority children, is carried to an extreme in Alaska. The
number of students
placed in special education and remedial classrooms is sometimes
as high as 70 or 80 percent. This results, in part, from
the fact that
special education and other resource people are typically
and traditionally those educators who are not trained to
be sensitive
to cultural
differences. Such differences often affect the evaluation
of a Native student’s test results and subsequent placement.
Unfortunately, it probably will be a considerable number
of years before Native teachers
hold the majority of positions in special education and other
resource areas. Also, the limited body of research that has
addressed these
issues is rarely disseminated, much less considered for use
by local school district administrations. Even the standard
curriculum
in regular classroom work is often taught on the level of “deficiency
mentality,” that is, that Native students are not capable
of learning on grade level or are not able to learn the quantity
of material
that students in the “Lower 48” are expected
to achieve. One common misconception seems to be that in
order for rural youth
to learn, the content must be delivered in a slow, drill-like,
repetitive manner.
These highly structured curricula dictate
the content to be learned and, most unfortunately, the mode
whereby the
teacher
presents
the material and the children respond. Curriculum consultants
and school district administrators, knowing little about
learning styles
of the Native population, determine the mode. This rigid
and routinized form of education very subtly indoctrinates
the
students to the
behavior patterns of mainstream America.
Two additional factors
will influence the effectiveness of Native teachers in Alaska. First
of all, community participation
may
ultimately foster
changes that allow the Native teacher more freedom to teach
in a manner unencumbered by Western tradition. Valuable
skills and
cultural
knowledge
are in the hands and heads of community members whose participation
would be a welcomed addition to the skills of a small village
school. However, the current state of affairs makes it
seem ridiculous for a community member to consider working in
the school as a
volunteer:
the proliferation of funded supplementary programs has
provided schools
with a plethora of paid, part-time positions. Nor is the
environment of the school conducive to volunteer work,
because the structure
of the daily schedule and tightness of structured curricula
do not accommodate
impromptu and/or varying structures of community participation.
Nevertheless, increased participation would provide community
people with an informed
picture of what actually goes on in school, and would provide
the teachers and students with alternative models for their
own respective
roles
in learning. And, finally, community participation in schooling
would inject the classroom, and school in general, with
a set of values
and a style of teaching that rarely has been represented
previously.
Many schools in Alaska exist as institutions
that are physically and ideologically separate from the community.
Such isolation
of the classroom from the community invites misunderstandings,
distrust and territoriality between teachers and parents
(Lightfoot, 1978). Such an arrangement makes it easy
for teachers and administrators
to use the students’ home life and parents as scapegoats
in the education process. One might expect that Native
teachers would not
experience this problem. On the contrary, some Native
teachers are finding resistance from the community in
their dealings
with children,
particularly in the area of discipline. Prior to their
employment, certain family ties, responsibilities, and
leveling mechanisms for
social positions had been clearly defined within the
community. Perhaps a violation of these prior relationships
creates
feelings of animosity between community members and local
Native teachers. Over
time, as communities become more used to seeing their
own members as members of the school faculty, such dissonance,
particularly in the
area of classroom management and control, may improve.
As
Native teachers comprise a larger percentage of the
total number of teachers in rural Alaska, qualitative
changes should
occur.
One of those changes may well be improved interaction
between students and teachers. Native teachers, having
a better
understanding of
village
life, may understand students’ values and interactional
styles that have traditionally and incorrectly been perceived
as a hindrance
to classroom learning.
In cases where the language of
the community is different from that of the school, Native
speakers could use the
language in the classroom
to enhance learning. Other significant changes can be
effected: more community influence (through formal channels
and also
through informal
networks of village life in which a Native teacher is
more likely to participate than a non-Native); curriculum
content
that reflects
the
environment of villages and the probable future; changes
within
the established school day schedule that better reflect
the village’s
traditional schedule; and, finally, an incorporation
of traditional Alaskan Native values and beliefs in the
classroom socialization process.
With very few exceptions,
these changes in the structure and content of the village
schools are yet to be seen.
With the
minute number
of Native teachers currently employed in Alaska’s
schools, and the lingering effects of collective educational
pasts of Native teachers
and village people, major change is difficult and will
only occur over a relatively long period of time.
Given
the past history of formal education in Alaska, the resistance
to change of a bureaucratic school structure,
and the pressures
to conform to the accepted notion of what a “good” teacher
is, the opportunity for innovative Native teachers to
surface is fraught with obstacles. Unless there is initiative
and opportunity for Native
teachers to follow in the footsteps of their non-Native
counterparts, schools will retain the status quo,
and Native teachers will be merely
a more efficient agent of the acculturative mission of
the school.
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