Alaska Native youth and their attitudes towards education

Building on Richard Condon's discussions of education in the Central Cana- dian Arctic village of Holman, this paper uses 1995 survey data to describe Alaska Na- tive high school students' perceptions of the purpose of school, the quality of their schools, the degree of adult encouragement...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Seyfrit, Carole L., Hamilton, Lawrence C.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholars.unh.edu/soc_facpub/424
http://www.jstor.org/stable/40316429
Description
Summary:Building on Richard Condon's discussions of education in the Central Cana- dian Arctic village of Holman, this paper uses 1995 survey data to describe Alaska Na- tive high school students' perceptions of the purpose of school, the quality of their schools, the degree of adult encouragement they receive, their Native language skills, and their residential expectations. While Holman students did not perceive great edu- cational expectations from their parents, students in' Alaskan villages are as likely to re- port lots of parental encouragement as are students who attend larger town or boarding schools. Only 15% of students in Holman indicated they wanted to live someplace other than Holman when they got older, but 85% of Alaska Native students think they will live someplace other than their home communities for most of the rest of their lives. The differences between adolescents in Holman and Alaska may be consequences of time. Oil revenues, the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, and the Molly Hootch decision in the 1970s predicated many changes in Alaska which in turn affected educa- tional policies and practices. Recent decisions affecting self-governance for Native peo- ples in the Canadian Arctic are likely to accelerate