Indian education professional development grants awarded
By
Rob Capriccioso
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A full list of grantees and grant amounts Arizona: Minnesota: Montana: Nebraska: Oklahoma: Oregon: South Dakota: |
When Obama was campaigning for president last summer, his education policy advisers told members of the National Indian Education Association that their candidate was dedicated to developing, retaining and rewarding a high-quality teaching force that would serve in hard-to-staff areas, including Indian reservations and rural school districts.
The advisers highlighted planned policies that would provide full scholarships at both undergraduate and graduate levels for teachers willing to make a four-year commitment to teaching in areas including reservations.
After hearing the Obama campaign’s plans, Lillian Sparks, NIEA executive director, said the organization has long been supportive of efforts to bolster professional development programs to aid Indian students.
On top of that, Sparks said, the organization continues to push for federal support to promote language and culturally based education for Native students, as research has shown such efforts to have positive effects. The Obama administration has yet to strongly focus on that area.
Gregg Wiggins, a spokesman for the Department of Education, explained that the colleges selected were shown to already have a strong commitment to educating American Indian students.
“They tend to be in areas with high concentrations of Indian students. The grants come with the expectation that [the colleges] will strengthen and increase their ability to educate Indian students.”
The colleges are also expected to keep track of their progress, Wiggins said.
Some of the institutions that have been awarded grants are tribal colleges, including Fort Belknap College and Salish Kootenai College in Montana, as well as Oglala Lakota College and Sinte Gleska University in South Dakota. The majority are state universities in rural areas.
Officials with the American Indian Higher Education Consortium, a group that represents the nation’s tribal colleges and universities, said professional development funding has long been necessary, as most tribal colleges are located in remote regions – a situation that often makes it difficult to attract the best educators.
The grants are part of the Office of Indian Education’s Professional Development program, which trains qualified individuals to become teachers and administrators in Indian communities.
The mission of the office is to support the efforts of local educational agencies, Indian tribes and organizations, postsecondary institutions, and other entities to meet the unique educational and cultural academic needs of American Indians and Alaska Native students.
More information about Indian education is available from the Office of Indian Education.
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Monday, Jul 13 at 3:20 PM i agree wrote ...
i believe that when there are ndn instructors in the indeginous studies areas...such episodes as what happened in Blanding, Utah would never happen. The blantant racist remarks exhuberated against the native people in the media is appalling. A so called historian of the navajo, who is white heads the department yet has no natives why? because the administration is a control freakkish cult..but will accept the money to teach ndns how to be ndns with the very concepts of colonism, apppleism picked
25979042 Inappropriate? Alert Us!Monday, Jul 13 at 1:17 PM Previous wrote ...
Oglala Lakota College only hires instructors who are white people and only they have long term employment on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. Forget the native instructor!
25969694 Inappropriate? Alert Us!Friday, Jul 10 at 2:31 PM Ning gay wrote ...
what a waste of money to the nebraska tribe...the curricullum has always been sub standard ...the money is funneled to the wrong sector...this is the tribe which many in leadership position continued questionable ethics in procurring those stolen eagle feathers to show off... then when the time came to step out for public tribal outcry over the sacred being destroyed by a few no voices were heard. If the college was so socially cultural sensitive the foundation thereof was inept at best. Respect
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