Center for Alaska Education Policy Research, University of Alaska Anchorage
Abstract
In 2004 and 2005 we gathered information on how boarding school and boarding home
experiences affected individual Alaska Natives, their families, and communities. From the early
1900s to the 1970s Alaska Natives were taken from rural communities that lacked either primary
or secondary schools and sent to boarding schools run by the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs
(BIA), by private churches or, later, by Alaska’s state government. Some were also sent to
boarding homes to attend school in urban places. We interviewed 61 Alaska Native adults who
attended boarding schools or participated in the urban boarding home program from the late
1940s through the early 1980s, as well as one child of boarding-school graduates. Their
experiences, some of which are shared in this report, reveal a glimpse of both the positive and
negative effects of past boarding schools.
Many of those we interviewed spoke with ambivalence about their boarding school experience,
finding both good and bad elements. Some of the good experiences included going to schools
that had high expectations of the students; educators and other school personnel who developed
personal relationships with students; individualized support for students who were struggling;
and discipline and structure that was supportive, not punitive. For many of those we interviewed,
boarding school offered an opportunity to learn about the world beyond village boundaries and to
develop lasting friendships. But these good experiences came at a cost. The cost for some was
abuse; interviewees reported physical and sexual abuse at the Wrangell Institute. At that school,
children were forbidden to speak their native languages and were even beaten for speaking them.
The goal of many educators at the time of mandatory boarding schools was to assimilate people
of different cultures and ethnicities into the dominant culture. This cost many students not only
the loss of their language, but also their culture and identity. These practices had lasting effects
on individual students, their families, and communities. Those we interviewed told of finding it
difficult to return home and be accepted. They felt that by being sent to boarding school they had
missed out on learning important traditional skills and had a harder time raising their own
children. For communities, the loss of children to boarding schools created a tremendous void,
one that interviewees said was filled by alcohol and a breakdown in society. Drugs, alcohol, and
suicide are some of the effects interviewees spoke of as coming from boarding home experiences
and the loss of cultural identity and family.
In 1976, the State of Alaska agreed to build schools in rural communities having eight (later ten)
or more school-age children. When these schools were built, it was no longer necessary to send
Native children to boarding schools. However, there is now an ongoing policy debate over the
cost and quality of these local schools and whether Native children might be better off attending
schools outside their communities. We hope that policymakers consider Alaska Natives’ past
experiences with boarding schools reported here and learn from them.
A journal article based on this research can be found in the Journal of American Indian Education
Vol. 47, No. 3 (2008), pp. 5-30 (26 pages)Ford FoundationExecutive Summary / Introduction and Background ; Study Methodology / Findings / Longer Term Effects of Boarding Schools on Individuals, Families, and Communities / Discussion/ Conclusion: What Next? / Bibliograph