"We Need More Native Teachers": Wyoming DOE Hears Input On Reservation Schools
Only about 50 percent of Native American students graduate high school, compared to 80 percent of white students. Thats one reason why the Wyoming Department of Education teamed up with the North Central Comprehensive Center, a national education contractor, to conduct listening sessions in each of the three school districts on the Wind River Reservation.
At the sessions, students and parents agreed that reservation schools need more Native American teachers, less bullying and gangs, and more culturally relevant courses, including Native language instruction. And, they said, they need academic expectations to be held to the same bar as every other Wyoming school.
My grandson goes to the school in Lander. We wont transfer him back here [to the reservation] because theyre two years behind where my grandson is, remarked one participant.
Wyoming Department of Education Policy Advisor Megan Degenfelder said this input will hopefully point the department in the right direction, to improve education for Native American students and to best be able to allocate our resources and time. And so I kind of looked at it, and still do, as a starting point. How do we get some data that we can evaluate and look to move forward on?
But Degenfelder said only about 40 people attended the listening sessions.
Read more: http://wyomingpublicmedia.org/post/we-need-more-native-teachers-wyoming-doe-hears-input-reservation-schools