The
Christian Science Monitor
Program Brings Native-American Culture to Schools
-BY-
Carol Berger, Special to The Christian Science Monitor
BOSTON
1997 - 05 - 21
Ask children for their views of native-American culture, and they're likely
to bring up dusty battles and bows and arrows. But mention that native-American
culture thrives today, and many kids stare in amazement. The Cradleboard
Teaching Project is out to change that.
The project - whose name harks from the traditional frame used by North
American Indians to carry their children - began a two-year pilot project
this year including five Indian and five non-Indian schools in the United
States. The aim is to improve self-identity and self-esteem in both Indian
and non-Indian children, and to increase contact between the two.
The curriculum focuses on specific tribal groups and history from the
perspective of native Americans, rather than that of European settlers.
This includes precolonial history, relationships with the federal government,
contact between Indians and non-Indians, contributions to contemporary
culture, and even the origin of the word Indian itself.
Harold Tarbell, a consultant on the project, sees a need for a teaching
curriculum that focuses on both native-American history and contemporary
culture.
"Even in those schools with a lot of native content, they are still
operating under a whole lot of stereotypes and misconceptions," says
the former Mohawk chief of the Akwesasne Reserve, which lies in both the
US and Canada. "Our objective is to put natives in a modern context
and make it possible for them to develop personal relationships, student
to student."
The creator of the Cradleboard Teaching Project, Buffy Sainte-Marie, is
a diminutive Canadian singer and composer who has worked throughout her
career to advance the cause of native Americans. She spent several years
developing the multimedia teaching program.
"The one truly heartbreaking thing about being a native person,"
she says, "is the lack of self identity. Native people, indigenous
people in general, are not genetically a part of the colonial heritage
and are still struggling for self identity."
She was born on a Canadian reserve but raised in a non-Indian community
in Massachusetts. "I was told as a child that Indian people simply
didn't exist."
But even for children raised in a native-American community, there are
questions surrounding identity. As Ms. Sainte-Marie explains, "What
is a 14-year-old in a native community supposed to think of herself? You
know, Who am I? Am I a 'Dances with Wolves?' Am I 'Pocahontas'?"
IN North America, more than 2 million people are of native-American or
aboriginal heritage. Canada's aboriginal community has a higher profile
than that in the US because it is a larger proportion of the population:
1 million of the country's 26 million people. But native Americans on
both sides of the border share many problems, including high suicide rates,
alcohol abuse, and unemployment.
Sainte-Marie believes that Cradleboard, funded by a $1.5 million grant
from the Kellogg Foundation in Battle Creek, Mich., will not only improve
what is taught in schools, but will enhance contact between Indians and
non-Indians. "[The project] comes from the very positive experience
I've had living in these two cultures, seeing how much they have to say,"
says Sainte-Marie, who works from Kapaa, Hawaii. "And then it's combined
with my own appreciation of technology and how [it] should be in the hands
of kids and all cultures."
Indian schools are paired with non-Indian schools and technical colleges,
and students are encouraged to interact via computers. The interactive
program also enables the schools to access resources about native-Americans.
Schools in Montana, Minnesota, Washington, New York, and South Dakota
are participating in the project. They represent people of the Puyallup,
Cree, Ojibwe, Mohawk, and Lakota.
Jim Ransom, a Mohawk living on the Akwesasne Reserve, is on the parent
committee of the Akwesasne Freedom School. "The public schools are
very good but they teach a white curriculum." He highlights the value
of Cradleboard's interactive nature: "The intent ... is to share
with partner, non-native schools a better understanding of the contributions
of native people to mainstream society."
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