Editorial: First Nations' Education at a Critical Juncture
The 2006 Canadian Census is now out, and the prognosis for on-reserve Aboriginal education is not good. It shows an ever-widening gap between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal education success (Richards, 2008).When First Nations assumed "control" of their education processes, it was somehow e...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
UBC Faculty of Education
2021
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/CJNE/article/view/196471 https://doi.org/10.14288/cjne.v31i2.196471 |
Summary: | The 2006 Canadian Census is now out, and the prognosis for on-reserve Aboriginal education is not good. It shows an ever-widening gap between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal education success (Richards, 2008).When First Nations assumed "control" of their education processes, it was somehow expected that positive change would occur, bringing success with fewer dropouts, more fulfillment, higher completion rates, and an education that would meet modern-day demands. In very few situations has this happened, more by accident than by systematic, administrative reform. In more locations than not, First Nations students have became pawns in a complex and troublesome transfer of control. The system has not changed and nor has the curriculum that supported this system. Control has simply meant a delegation of some authority to First Nations and their locally elected or appointed school boards. The very system that failed to deliver relevant and satisfying education off-reserve has now moved on-reserve. But even more significant, the budget and funding that supported First Nations students in off-reserve schools did not transfer with them. First Nations are expected to deliver the same education with a fraction of the funds designated to Aboriginal students who attend provincial schools. This discrepancy has been pointed out in numerous doctoral dissertations (Steinhauer, 2008), in a variety of scholarly journals (Wilson, 2007), in national newspaper editorials, and in funded research publications (Mendelson, 2008). |
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