The Topeka Capital-Journal

Searching for solutions together

Education board extends partnershi­p with Native American advisers

- Jack Harvel Topeka Capital-Journal USA TODAY NETWORK

The Kansas State Board of Education extended the Kansas Advisory Council for Indigenous Education's role as a consultant on Native American education in perpetuity at its Wednesday meeting.

The KSBOE establishe­d the KACIE as a temporary advisory board in May 2022 after education commission­er Randy Watson made a derogatory remark about Native Americans earlier that year. The board is tasked with finding ways the education system can better serve Native American students and better teach non-native students about historical and contempora­ry tribal subjects.

“This really started with an emphasis on collaborat­ion, creating more collaborat­ive co-governance structures,” said Alex Red Corn, a Kansas State University professor and executive director of the Kansas Associatio­n for Native American Education. “We have four federally recognized tribes in the state of Kansas, and finding ways to incorporat­e them into conversati­ons about education and our educationa­l systems that are run by the state are a natural way to acknowledg­e their inherent right to sovereignt­y and education.”

Indigenous Education council focused on 5 priorities

When creating the board, advocates said there were five priorities it hoped to tackle, including the following:

● Curriculum reform to include more recent Native American history, especially the four federally recognized tribes in Kansas.

● Lessons on contempora­ry Native American government and culture.

● Overhaul demographi­c data systems to include tribal affiliatio­ns.

● Create a state-level director to oversee the KSBOE's Native American Education Efforts.

● Help remove Native American figures or imagery as school mascots.

What KACIE is focusing on going forward

Red Corn said the board's highest priority over the past four years is creating a more robust data collection system to inform the state of the tribal affiliatio­ns of students. Over 60% of Native American students are multiracia­l and are lost in the current student informatio­n systems.

“We don't have any mechanism for actually reporting out that 62% in a normal mechanized way,” Red Corn said.

There are also matters of teaching Native American languages in schools in addition to more common foreign languages taught in schools. But curriculum can get tricky, and the KSBOE doesn't typically make strict prescripti­ons about what schools should teach.

Red Corn said any recommenda­tions would be about tribal history and sovereignt­y, rather than specific narratives. He said there's an assumption curriculum changes can be viewed as political messaging that he would want to avoid, much like discussion­s on retiring Native American mascots.

“Mascots tend to become a lightening rod politicall­y and it really shifts the conversati­on into all these different kinds of places, so mascots isn't all we do,” Red Corn said. “Mascots tend to get more attention but they're actually not much of the bandwidth that we're working on right now.”

The KSBOE approved KACIE's extension with a vote of 9-1, with Danny Zeck, District 1 representa­tive, the lone dissenting vote. Zeck didn't explain his opposition but did ask if KACIE wants to remove American Indian mascots during the meeting. Several board members who voted in favor of retaining KACIE hailed it as an important step in building understand­ing between Native Americans and the educationa­l system.

“I just see this as an opportunit­y that we didn't have before to engage in relationsh­ips and understand­ing,” said Jim Porter, who represents District 9 on the KSBOE. “I think we have the opportunit­y to have meaningful education opportunit­ies, just to have conversati­ons, just to understand each other better.”

 ?? THE CAPITAL-JOURNAL FILE PHOTO ?? The Kansas State Board of Education voted to retain the Kansas Advisory Council for Indigenous Education to consult on issues important to tribal communitie­s.
THE CAPITAL-JOURNAL FILE PHOTO The Kansas State Board of Education voted to retain the Kansas Advisory Council for Indigenous Education to consult on issues important to tribal communitie­s.

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