Project
6.1
SCHOOLS SERVING NATIVE AMERICA: A SERIES OF CASE STUDIES
Demmert 11/17/98
INTEGRATED SUMMARY DOCUMENT
SCHOOLS SERVING NATIVE AMERICA: A SERIES
OF CASE STUDIES
Schools and programs that serve Native American
students (American Indian, Native Alaskan, and Native Hawaiian) have not
been universally regarded as successful. Early educational programs stressed
domestic training for women, farming and ranching for men, and work with
machinery or blacksmithing. Some of these early programs were successful,
but more recent academic efforts have resulted in significant levels of
students leaving schools early, or not doing well academically. Surprising
as it may seem there are records of successful for individual students,
for low percentages of all students, and some schools that have been relatively
successful. The success or failure of students, tribes, or schools depend
to some degree upon the period of history, the group referred to, and
who is operating the school. Success may also depend upon the attention
given to strengthening the language and cultural base of the students
served by the community or school.
Historically Native groups like the Cherokees and the Native Hawaiians
operated their own school systems. Some of these early schools were very
successful in that those students were multilingual; spoke higher levels
of English that the average population living around them, and significantly
influenced the development of the territory or state in which they lived.
Some, like the Native Alaskan, even influenced state legislation or federal
policy for the U.S. government at large. Today, there are increasingly
greater numbers of Native Americans that operate their own school systems
with support from their state, the federal government, the church, and/or
a philanthropic organization. The general tenor of many of the reports
on the education of Native students is that both Bureau of Indian Affairs
and public schools serving Native America have not been very successful
in educating many of the students that attend them. The academic performance
levels are below national averages; the numbers of students leaving school
early are very high; and the social environment of the school seldom supports
the language and cultural base of the Native community served.
There are certainly a variety of reasons that some of these early schools
serving Native America were unsuccessful. There are certainly a number
of reasons that schools serving some Native communities and students today
happen to be very successful. I have my perspectives about what some of
these reasons include, but there is little hard evidence about what students
are actually experiencing in the school setting. In an effort to identify
and understand what is happening in a mix of these schools, I decided
to organize a series of case studies on schools or programs that serve
Native communities that incorporated a Native language and cultural curriculum.
I looked for a school or program that was viewed as relatively successful
(students viewed as doing well academically, and a school that was supported
by the community). I looked for ten such schools or language and cultural
programs, contacted them through a process of working with a group of
educators that were nationally or regionally known to the local community,
and worked on an agreement to do a case study on each. I anticipated that
5 7 of those sites would work with me (through a local person called
a field investigator), and complete the process. An ambitious undertaking,
but one that is continuing to move forward albeit slowly and painstakingly.
The field investigators and five sites (located in Alaska, South
Dakota, Hawaii, Oregon, and Minnesota) have completed the collection of
information and completed a draft of a case study of the school or educational
program selected. Five of the original ten sites considered have not made
much progress, and may not complete the process. Changes in school boards,
school administration, or other priorities have delayed the process for
those not completing the case study. Two educational programs from the
group that have not collected information or written anything are still
interested in working on their case, the Navajo, and the Zuni Pueblo.
If things work out we may still end-up with seven case studies.
I was personally interested in generating a local awareness about
the role research could play in providing support, introducing challenging
new ideas, and in providing direction for a given program. I was also
interested in promoting the development of research (case study) skills
among local educators working with Native communities. Finally, I was
interested in testing whether we could identify a set of characteristics
that were consistent across the set of case studies. The field investigators
and a small group of select Indian educators met with me at Western Washington
University in Bellingham, Washington early in the developmental stage
to discuss the ideas behind the project and their interest in participating.
They serve as a national board, monitoring the series of case studies,
to insure that the needs of the Native communities are not compromised,
and that what ever we complete (as a final report) is worth publishing.
- Five of the case study sites that have completed a draft of the
case study, and one that is still working on collecting the information,
met a second time at Western Washington University to present the information
they had collected. After listening to each case study site present
what they had completed, we discussed their impressions of what they
had found, and what might be common across each of the case studies.
The preliminary information suggested the following:
- That each of the case study sites had a local educational leader
that brought the ideas for the school together or program together,
building a partnership between the community and school or program;
- That the faculty, students, and members of the community were in
support of promoting the language and culture of the community as
a part of schooling; and
- That traditional knowledge and educational systems my still have
a role in the educational process and that they certainly have a place
in supporting self and group identity as Indian, Native Alaskan, or
Native Hawaiian.
These preliminary findings will be tested as the completed case studies
are analyzed, and as we take another look at the communities if that becomes
necessary.
There are two pieces of this series of case studies that are yet
to be completely developed and implemented. They are on the discussion
table, and some general agreements or actual activities have occurred.
First, the case study investigators and representatives of the school
have discussed the possibility of developing a partnership that will enable
them to work together in the future, giving support and generating new
ideas that each might try. Western Washington University has created an
electronic communications system that allows each school to interact with
each other, to work with individual field investigators, to work with
other educational resource people, and to interact with the principal
investigator. This electronic communications system will serve as a major
tool for the consortium that will be built. Second, a number of Circumpolar
Nations that are part of a consortium of Ministers of Education and educators
that work, or have spent their lives working in the north, are conducting
a series of case studies or research projects that will complement the
series of case studies about Native schools serving Native students. The
Native American group and the circumpolar group have met and discussed
some of the information each has gathered. This discourse will continue,
and help lead to a more in-depth understanding of what is happening in
their respective school systems, and whether there are any common characteristics
that cut across each of their sites. Worth analyzing and understanding
from my perspective.
The cross-national perspectives and understandings that are common
knowledge to the circumpolar group have not generally been available to
the participants of the case studies serving Native America. Some of these
cross-national perspectives and understandings include the following:
- There are school or program characteristics that cut across countries
and projects or schools;
- Each location is in a different stage of development, some ahead
in some areas, some behind in some areas;
- Each has something to learn from the exchange of information and
the discussions that take place;
- Each has recognized that the issues of indigenous languages and
cultures are at the forefront of their concerns and priorities; and
- There is other information to learn about that will benefit each
in some way or another and lend support to the activities that each
are engaged in at an individual site.
The original proposal intended to present a series of case studies that
focused on the following: 1) determine the extent to which schools have
changed as a result of greater local authority and responsibility; 2)
to identify characteristics that are consistent across schools; and 3)
to measure and evaluate the attitudes of Native students about their educational
performance and future perspectives.
The information will be available for the schools and communities
to use for their own purposes, for policy makers to consider in their
development of programs and support of school activities, and for any
long range strategic planning and legislative activity that might occur.
Methodology
Seven sites were to be selected from a variety of locations within
the United States for description and analysis. A mix of schools and programs
serving Native students were chosen for study. The selection of these
sites were made by the principal investigator with the advice of a national
coalition of Native educators and other experts. The schools chosen for
participation depended upon their meeting the definition of local control
under this study, the schools willingness to participate as partners in
the study, and the availability of local field workers for conducting
interviews and collecting information.
A consortium of nationally known and respected educators serve as
an oversight committee to insure that the purposes of the study are carried
out and that the research standards established for the study are met.
In addition, the information generated from the case studies will be available
for the benefit of the participating schools, for other schools interested
in an analysis of the information gathered for the seven sites, and for
policy considerations in each participating community.
Regional investigators (who will also serve as regional trainers)
were selected and trained in the case study method, and are responsible
for training local people in data gathering techniques and the data collection
process. They are responsible for organizing the information gathered
in accordance with the criteria set forth in the handbook and for submitting
the information gathered in the format developed by the principal investigator.
The principal investigator is responsible for writing the narrative for
each case study except where regional coordinators have been selected
to handle that responsibility.
The studies included the use of oral interviews and written questionnaires
in the languages of the communities in which the schools are located.
The principal investigator was responsible for training the regional trainers,
developing the guiding principles, developing the instruments to be used
in the study, and providing other information to be used. The principal
investigator is responsible for reviewing the information gathered, chairs
the advisory committee meetings, analyzing the information, and has the
primary responsibility for producing the final report. The principal investigator
is responsible for working with the advisory committee and keeping the
committee informed of the progress and any problems that surface requiring
changes in the methodology or sites selected.
The advisory committee will review the final report and approve it
for release (in partnership with the selected sites), and use by the various
sites, or decline to approve the report and, therefore, its distribution.
Guiding Principles
1. The principal investigator and advisory committee will insure
that the study is conducted in a manner that does not violate the
cultural integrity of the school and community studied (this includes
approval of the standards adopted for this study).
2. The interviews conducted at each of the sites selected for
this study will be conducted in the language of the school and community.
3. Participants responsible for training, gathering information
and being interviewed will have the purposes of the study explained.
4. Project schools or programs considered for selection must have
been in existence at least five (5) years in order to be selected.
5. Each site selected for the case study shall have the opportunity
to review their case for accuracy and have inaccuracies corrected.
6. Community members, school administrators, and students selected
for interviews shall be randomly selected.
7. The anonymity of interviewees will be protected unless written
approval is obtained from a participant to release his or her name
for a specific purpose.
Policies
? The selection of school sites will be made through a process established
by the regional coordinators that includes approval by the schools and
communities selected.
? There will be nothing in the process of collecting information
for the case studies or in the reports that will be culturally or politically
insensitive to the participating community and school.
? The data collectors and regional trainers will be selected because
of their sensitivities to the cultural background of the communities
and schools chosen for the case studies.
? Anonymity of persons interviewed will be protected. The names
of individuals named in the study will only occur where it will add
to the case and if the person(s) named gives written permission (or
in the case of a deceased person, permission is given by the nearest
relative).
? The advisory committee will have final concurrence on the release
of the study. If this does not occur, the principal investigator may
provide anonymity to the case study sites and use the study for academic
purposes only.
Domains identified for data gathering and analysis include the following:
1. School-community relationships:
? Control and power
? Shared vision and values
? Level and quality of interaction between the two
2. Staffing patterns:
? Level of training
? Male female ratios
? Native and non-Native mix of employees
3. Culture and environment of the school:
? Languages of instruction
? Physical location
? Transportation
? Boarding school/day school
? Instructional materials
? School year
? Spirituality and moral fiber of school community
3. Nature and diversity of the student body
? Informal or traditional learning experiences in the family or
community
? Academic performance
? Social development
? Citizenship
? Racial mix
? Health, diet and wellness
4. Demographics and history of the school
? Fiscal
? Governance
? Relationship between schooling and needs of the community
Specific areas of interest to be explored include the following:
The intersection between traditional mores and values (including language
and cultural activities) and the resulting culture of the school. (Venn
diagram: a series of independent and concentric circles used to show amounts
of overlap between two activities or events, with the overlaps creating
something new).
The learning opportunities that are identified as most important to the
needs of the indigenous communities.
The use of traditional knowledge and systems of education that might
be in evidence in the school or in the community, including:
? Whether members of the communities know or practice some of the
more traditional areas of knowledge (i.e., medicine, science, mathematics,
subsistence activity etc.).
? An appreciation for and an understanding of the balance required
in the natural environment.
? An understanding that balance is required in one's life if one
is to meet the challenges of life on a personal basis as well as respond
to the expectations of a particular community.
Appropriate data gathering techniques include the following:
? Group process (asking and getting answers in a community gathering)
? Individual questions
? Personal interviews
? Written questionnaires
? Official records and files
? Participant observations
Field investigators and local interviewers were selected because
of their general understanding of the community and for their personal
demeanor and interpersonal skills (they must be closely attuned to that
specific community and school). It is expected that this is necessary
if accurate data is to be collected from the school and community members.
Assumptions:
* In general, the curriculum of schools under Native control
will not have changed significantly from schools that are under the
control of non-Native communities.
* In cases where a Native language and cultural emphases has
been added to the curriculum, as a regular part of the culture of
the school, students will have achieved higher academic performance
levels than students in schools where the language and cultural activities
are not a regular part of the school environment.
* Schools that have added a Native language and cultural curriculum
will have a majority of students that have a positive self-image.
* Schools under Native control will have made a special effort
to recruit Native teachers and administrators and have a majority
of Native personnel.
* Schools that have Native teachers and administrators will have
added Native language and cultural classes to the curriculum.
* Schools that have teachers that speak the language and understand
the culture of the community will have forged strong student and community
support.
* Communities that demonstrate significant control of their schools
will have a distinct sense of ownership for their schools, and have
a positive attitude towards the curriculum, the administration, and
the teachers.
* Students that begin schooling using the Native language (where
it is the first language of the home) will have higher standards of
language usage in the national language than students that do not
start school in their first language.
* Communities that have developed early childhood education programs,
that are linguistically, developmentally, and culturally appropriate,
will have students that experience high academic achievement in school,
and have fewer social and cultural conflicts than students that do
not attend early childhood programs.
Demographics
1. The general location of the community including a physical
description, the size of the population, any industry (including any
traditional economic activity), its general economic status, and a
general educational level of its people.
2. A general description of the school, the number of students,
the make-up of its faculty by ethnic background, the educational level
of the administration and teachers, and whether the community is connected
by road to larger cities.
3. A general description of the climate including average rainfall,
average temperatures in the summer and winter months, and whether
the terrain is forested, desert, or tundra.
The School and Program Description
1. A description of the administrative structure and authority
and responsibility of administration and teachers.
2. A general description of the school setting and organizational
structure of the different grades.
3. A description of the physical environment of the school, the
school culture, and the attitudes of students, parents, teachers,
administrators, and community leaders.
4. A description of the kinds of curriculum content and any relationships
to traditional knowledge, culture, and language of the community.
5. A description of the academic performance levels of students
(based upon the normal assessment and evaluation procedures practiced
in the school).
6. A description of how the school acquired local control, whether
through community or legislative initiative.
8. A description of how well the students do in the Native language
(where it is in use), and in English (the national language).
The purposes, the methodology, the guiding principles, the policies,
have all been followed closely and are consistent with actual events.
The field investigators have become the national advisory board (the only
major change in the project).
It is expected that a discussion of the case studies by the field
investigators and their local meetings and discussion of the case studies
will provide information that will influence change. The changes that
occur will be a direct result of what the case study process, and the
case studies themselves show as missing, or in need of strengthening.
In addition, information gathered will become part of a national and international
discourse on ways to improve academic performance and intellectual development
among Native peoples. The case studies will add a small part to the larger
picture that is emerging for policy makers, and for educators alike. These
anticipated results are consistent with what the unifying themes of the
projects and CREDE.
It is difficult at this point to measure how closely the project
will fit the "Project to Program Unifying Themes," and the "Project
to CREDE Unifying Themes," until the analysis and writing of the
case studies is completed. I expect that they will be closely aligned
because of the nature of the study. There is already some evidence of
local program change as a result of preliminary reports from at least
one case study. I expect that there will be more.
Dissemination of the case studies and final report is anticipated,
and will depend upon the final quality and results of the case studies,
and the comfort level of the case study sites.
It is too early yet to determine the future direction of additional
research resulting from this study. I expect that the proposal that the
RAND Corporation and I have developed to look at the NAEP information
will be the next step.