Current Administration of Indian Control of Indian Education in Alberta: Implications and Challenges

This mixed method, exploratory multi-site case study sought to understand the administrative, economic, and political challenges faced by First Nations education directors in Alberta. The purpose was to find out whether (and in what ways) these challenges restrict their capacity to improve the quali...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mai`Stoina - Eagle Speaker, Daphne
Other Authors: Winchester, W. Ian S.
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate Studies 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11023/2070
https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/25505
Description
Summary:This mixed method, exploratory multi-site case study sought to understand the administrative, economic, and political challenges faced by First Nations education directors in Alberta. The purpose was to find out whether (and in what ways) these challenges restrict their capacity to improve the quality of schooling for First Nation children and to identify the roles and responsibilities of education directors who directly administer First Nation schools. The theoretical lens of Tribal Critical Race Theory (TribCrit) underpinned this study. Survey and semi-structured interviews were conducted with 16 education directors in Alberta representing 34 First Nations. This study also found that the processes and procedures put in place, for newly hired education directors to work with, varied between First Nations and were deemed insufficient. Some of the challenges education directors faced included: working with the general education system management, providing instructional leadership; negotiating change; working with a school board, council or oversight body; reporting to a range of internal and external authorities; recruitment and retention of effective teachers; being constrained by federal and provincial mandates, dealing with a perceived crisis in education within First Nation; community pressure for provincial schools to be the preferred schools for students to attend; and support from the parent, community, and agencies for schools was lacking. The most critical and chronic challenge as noted by education directors is the student achievement gap between FN students and other Alberta school students. Also, language and culture programs are not being adequately funded in First Nations. This research revealed that education directors believe First Nations are supportive of Indian Control of Education but perceive the federal government as unsupportive. Critically, the research revealed that the extent and nature of poverty experienced by students affects proper implementation of Indian control of Indian ...