How Tribal Colleges Reverse Boarding School Native Education Legacy

Jan 27, 2012 | Archives, Blog

Education was a tool used by the U.S. government to try to assimilate American Indians. This Week in Indian Country’s piece, “Schools for Scandal,” illustrates the history behind U.S. policy to assimilate American Indians in boarding schools.

Richard Henry Pratt, a former U.S. Army officer, summed up the government policy in the late 1800s that was carried forward into the early 1900s by saying, “A great general has said that the only good Indian is a dead one. I agree with the sentiment, but only in this: that all the Indian there is in the race should be dead. Kill the Indian in him and save the Man.” As part of this philosophy that was entrenched in federal policy, the government took Indian children away from their families and tried to make them speak, dress, and act like whites. Native language was forbidden.

By 1900 there were approximately 25 federally funded boarding schools off reservations in the United States.

Today tribes have taken more responsibility for educating their youth and incorporating language and culture into school curricula to combat the damage that was done during the boarding school era. In 1968, the first tribal college was founded by the Navajo nation (Diné College). Yet there is still a lot of work to be done. Many Native languages have disappeared or are disappearing, and the legacy of assimilation policies have left an indelible scar on Indian people and their attitudes towards education.

Tell us: What are some of the ways you feel that tribal colleges are helping to reverse the legacy of boarding school? Share your tribal college success stories here!

Recent Blog Posts

Observing Orange Shirt Day – Why Awareness Matters 

Observing Orange Shirt Day – Why Awareness Matters 

In Canada, Orange Shirt Day is observed on September 30 as a federal holiday called the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. The American Indian College Fund (College Fund) and other National Native Scholarship Providers are working to raise awareness of this important day of observation in solidarity with the survivors of boarding schools across North America.

American Indian College Fund Partners with National Native Scholarship Providers to Raise Awareness of Boarding School Students 

American Indian College Fund Partners with National Native Scholarship Providers to Raise Awareness of Boarding School Students 

The American Indian College Fund (College Fund) and other National Native Scholarship Providers (NNSPs), including AISES, Cobell Scholarship Fund, and Native Forward Scholars Fund, are raising awareness of Orange Shirt Day in solidarity with Native people in Canada, where it is observed on September 30 as a federal holiday called the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.  

American Indian College Fund Appoints Five New Trustees to Board for Three-Year Terms

American Indian College Fund Appoints Five New Trustees to Board for Three-Year Terms

The American Indian College Fund welcomes five members to its governing board of trustees for three-year terms. The three tribal college presidents named to the board include Dr. Sean Chandler of Aaniiih Nakoda College, Eva Flying of Chief Dull Knife College, and Dr. Dawn Tobacco-Two Crow-Frank of Oglala Lakota College. The two private sector trustees include Nicole Bellefuille, J.D., a vice president in the financial services industry, and Nalneesh Gaur, a partner with PwC in their Cybersecurity practice.