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| 2003-11-14 | Thanksgiving Column Piece |
Additional information: Kapsner by Representative Mary Kapsner Next week most of us will be sitting down with family and friends to enjoy a Thanksgiving meal and reflect on the blessings in our personal lives. It’s a good time of year to do this, following summer and fall harvests, back to school activities and the marathon of fall meetings that have become yearly events. I’ve attended my share of these meetings myself—AVCP in Bethel, AFN and the Alaska Native Education Summit, for starters. One of the reasons we meet together is to focus on areas that need to be fixed, problems and challenges that affect our daily lives. Take education, for example. State funding, state mandates for high school exit exams, federal requirements under No Child Left Behind present huge challenges to our educational system and to individual students and families. Issues specific to Alaska Native students, including academic performance, culturally relevant curriculum and strategies that will get more Alaska Natives into the workforce weigh on the Native community statewide. The challenges addressed at conventions, summits, and meetings are significant ones and deserving of our best efforts individually and collective to change the tide. My message to participants at the Alaska Native Education Summit, however, focused on celebrating how far we have come in the educational arena. My grandmother was raised to be a wife and mother and began her “career” at the age of 14. My mother attended BIA day school in Kwethluk and was then sent away to Chemawa boarding school. I benefited from the Molly Hootch settlement and am proud today to say I am a product of the Lower Kuskokwim School District. A whole new standard has been thrust upon us in just one generation’s time. NCLB aside, I think we’re doing very well.
I’ve used examples from the work at LKSD to try to make the point that as we take stock in our lives, we do have a lot to be thankful for that extends beyond our front doors. I could have written paragraphs about the advocacy and hard work that has occurred over the years and is currently being done at other schools in our region, at YKHC, AVCP, Coastal Villages, Cenaluilriit, and a host of other organizations too long to mention. I leave you with my personal wishes for a healthy Thanksgiving Day and a sincere thank you to each and every person in the region who contributes to the blessings of life in the Y-K Delta. | |