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A Proposal For First Nations Education

Decent Essays

Education is important to the survival of a community through the perseverance of language and culture, through the cultivation of learning in the belief that all should have the chance to share in life and as otherwise stated by John Dewey (1916), "a process of living and not a preparation for future living." As we understand it - it is a process of inviting truth and possibility, of encouraging and giving time to discovery. (Smith, 2015). Education is therefore defined as the process of receiving or giving systematic instruction, especially at a school or university setting, However, this issue of receiving and or giving systematic instruction has long been the central debate of many Aboriginal (and other minority) communities as the individuals …show more content…

In an open letter to the Canadian parliament, Shawn A-in-chut Atleo, National Chief stated: The education of our children is a fundamental and sacred responsibility and both a right and a duty to our Nations. The residential schools era is a deep scar on the national soul of this country, [...] and while our ways, our rights and our responsibilities were pushed aside by the federal government in the residential schools era, we have been fighting back ever since to take back this responsibility. (Atleo, 2013). Not only does the title propose ambivalence but individuals state that the legislation strips away their rights and it puts too much control of the education in the hands of the federal government. Afraid that it will just be a re-run of the residential school systems, they state: "this is a new era in First Nations leadership where we don't accept the crumbs that they are offering as enticements to allow for our jurisdictions to be swept away under their legislation." (Rennie, …show more content…

Not by a day, not by a minute, not even by a second. And while he has rejected the proposal of Bill C-33 (to the favor of many Aboriginals), he drew five conditions from the 1972 policy statement, of which need to be met through a critical lens, covering Indian Control of Indian Education: First Nation control and respecting inherent and treaty rights, funding, languages and culture, oversight, and ongoing process of meaningful engagement – concluding to act now together for the children of today and tomorrow. (Atleo, 2013). Cultural conflict begins when the institution refuse[s] to acknowledge the continued connection to culture and community that students maintain while studying and the accommodation of difference (of culture, race, gender) continues to suggest "less than" and unequal treatment. To say to be equal is to be the same over simplifies the complexity of accommodation of difference because it is anything but simple. The whole structurally built institution(s) are more complex than simply choosing and doing between right and wrong. The binaries, of good and bad, black and white, false and reality - are all sub divisions within the broader spectrum of society. And where we fit into that is ambivalent

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