Private
Schooling on the Reservation
by
Ryan McMaken
Last
Year, the Southern Ute Indian Reservation opened the first and only
tribally run school in the United States. After decades of mediocre
education and cultural dilution in the Colorado public school system,
the tribe decided to fund its own private school that would teach
the language and the customs of the Southern Utes to Indians on
the reservation and in surrounding areas. The school was created
in response to a demand that the cultural and educational needs
of local Indians be better met. There are no teachers unions. There
are no bureaucratic regulations about what should be taught and
when. . The school is run by Indians for Indians with no cost to
the taxpayers of the state of Colorado. The school was opened after
much debate among tribal members who finally appropriated two million
dollars for the school’s operation. Parents and elders of the tribe,
some of whom have no teaching license, staff it. The classes meet
in an old refurbished boarding school where students are taught
using the teaching system pioneered by Maria Montessori.
The
most notable part of the education that goes on at the Southern
Ute Indian Academy is how much attention is given to individually
structured education. In a place like Southwestern Colorado, such
individual attention is of paramount importance. Some students speak
Spanish better than English, while other speak English very well.
Some students are mostly Ute while others have very little Ute heritage.
All of the students are given the materials necessary to learn in
light of their individual background. On the wall, a sign reads,
"Give thanks to the Creator or to God". None of this would
be surprising or unusual to anyone familiar with Montessori’s education
system. The goal of Montessori education is to provide students
with skills that accentuate their individuality while making them
active members of whatever community they happen to come from. The
Montessori system is not alone in giving attention to the individual
student. There are a variety of educational philosophies that put
much effort into developing the individual. The public schools use
none of these.
Private
schooling has unexpectedly invigorated the local community. Although
there were reservations about the lack of licensed teachers at first,
the fact that students are learning to read in a matter of weeks
instead of months or even years has inspired the locals with confidence.
The teachers are not unionized. They do not speak of what the teachers
unions call "parental interference". Parental involvement
is encouraged. The teachers are members of a local school responsive
to the local community.
The
Southern Ute reservation is still the only reservation that operates
its own school. It is remarkable that the Southern Utes would be
the only tribe to make a tribally run school a priority. Indian
children generally do poorly in public schools, and in spite of
all the lip service to multiculturalism, Indian culture is generally
neglected. Several decades ago, Indian culture was actively opposed
in the public schools, but in recent years, the cultural destruction
that Indian youths have been experiencing has been due to ignorance
of Indian culture on the part of the educators and adherence to
school policies of multiculturalism which are really a scheme of
anti-culturalism which seeks to destroy all distinctions among students.
Many
Southern Utes recognized this and opened the Academy. But Indians
are not the only ones who are subjected to Cultural destruction
in the public schools. Every Christian student who must endure constant
criticism of his religion in the name of multiculturalism is a victim.
Every black and Puerto Rican child who can’t read because he’s too
busy learning about how to save the whales is a victim. As white
males are belittled and black students are left illiterate, the
taxpayers are asked to shell out more money.
In
the end, the public schools leave the parent helpless while demanding
more money, and forcing the student to conform to a culture that
he or she may not be a part of. The case of the Southern Utes is
just one vivid illustration of how the public schools are failing
our children both educationally and culturally. While the students
at the Ute Academy pursue different interests, are multilingual,
and can all read, the students in the nearby public school are all
subjected to the same command and control style of teaching and
are lucky to ever read at anything above a third grade level. To
the parents of many Ute students, as well as others elsewhere who
have suffered similar fates, the future looks grim.
The
public school claim to "multiculturalism" is nothing more
than an attempt to cover up the incompetence and lack of individuality
that is allowed in public education. If any real diversity is ever
to be achieved in public schooling, the school systems must be responsive
to local concerns and with respect to local customs and culture.
Contrary to what the modern "experts" say, the purpose
of public schooling is not to hammer the students into homogeneous
"world citizens" who are ashamed of their own parents
and their own heritage. As Montessori education and other community
based systems would demand, good education should allow students
to become constructive members of their own community and to be
self-supporting individuals. Of course, the public schools do none
of the above, and for this, they should be held accountable.
February
24, 2001
Ryan
McMaken lives in Denver, Colorado. He edits the Western
Mercury.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
Ryan
McMaken Archives
|