Legislature(2021 - 2022)DAVIS 106

02/28/2022 08:00 AM House EDUCATION

Note: the audio and video recordings are distinct records and are obtained from different sources. As such there may be key differences between the two. The audio recordings are captured by our records offices as the official record of the meeting and will have more accurate timestamps. Use the icons to switch between them.

Download Mp3. <- Right click and save file as

Audio Topic
08:04:11 AM Start
08:05:04 AM Presentation(s) Understanding Culturally Responsive Education in Alaska
10:04:14 AM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Presentation: Understanding culturally TELECONFERENCED
responsive education in Alaska by
Lance (X_’unei) A Twitchell, M.F.A., Ph.D.,
University of Alaska Southeast, Alaska Native
Languages
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
               HOUSE EDUCATION STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                       February 28, 2022                                                                                        
                           8:04 a.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Harriet Drummond, Co-Chair                                                                                       
Representative Andi Story, Co-Chair                                                                                             
Representative Tiffany Zulkosky                                                                                                 
Representative Grier Hopkins                                                                                                    
Representative Mike Prax                                                                                                        
Representative Mike Cronk                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Ronald Gillham                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION(S) UNDERSTANDING CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE EDUCATION IN                                                                
ALASKA                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
LIZ LA QUEN NAAY MEDICINE CROW, PhD, President                                                                                  
First Alaskans Institute                                                                                                        
Kake, Alaska                                                                                                                    
POSITION STATEMENT:  Presented on culturally responsive                                                                       
education in Alaska.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
LANCE X'UNEI TWITCHELL, PhD, representing self                                                                                  
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  Presented on culturally responsive                                                                       
education in Alaska.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
TERRI WALKER, Superintendent                                                                                                    
Northwest Arctic Borough School District                                                                                        
Kotzebue, Alaska                                                                                                                
POSITION STATEMENT:  Presented on culturally responsive                                                                       
education in Alaska.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
8:04:11 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  ANDI   STORY  called   the  House   Education  Standing                                                             
Committee  meeting  to  order  at   8:04  a.m.    Representatives                                                               
Zulkosky, Hopkins, Drummond,  and Story were present  at the call                                                               
to order.  Representatives Prax  and Cronk arrived as the meeting                                                               
was in progress.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION(S)  Understanding  culturally responsive  education                                                               
in Alaska                                                                                                                       
PRESENTATION(S) Understanding Culturally Responsive Education in                                                            
                             Alaska                                                                                         
                                                                                                                              
8:05:04 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR STORY  announced that the  only order of  business would                                                               
be   a  presentation   on  understanding   culturally  responsive                                                               
education in Alaska.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
8:07:20 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LIZ LA  QUEN NAAY MEDICINE  CROW, PhD, President,  First Alaskans                                                               
Institute,   shared   her   perspectives   regarding   culturally                                                               
responsive education in Alaska.   She described her experience in                                                               
the  state's  education  system as  very  painful,  resulting  in                                                               
justified  emotions  of  frustration,   hurt,  and  anger.    She                                                               
referenced a  tribunal event where fellow  Native Alaskans shared                                                               
stories about  negative experiences in the  public school system.                                                               
She pointed out that the  education policy of assimilating Alaska                                                               
Natives  has  remained the  same  since  before statehood.    She                                                               
continued  that  this policy  has  excluded  the Native  ways  of                                                               
teaching and caused suffering in Native peoples.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
DR. MEDICINE  CROW recalled  a story  her grandmother  had retold                                                               
throughout her  life.  She  stated that with each  retelling, she                                                               
had learned something  new, as stories help  build connections to                                                               
ancestors.  She said that  Native teachings relate that opposites                                                               
are not  adversaries, rather they represent  balance, and "Alaska                                                               
is built on diversity, and diversity  is a strength."  She stated                                                               
that connections to  Native ways of being are  available but have                                                               
not been tapped.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
8:19:25 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR.  MEDICINE   CROW  listed  several  distinguished   local  and                                                               
international Native leaders and  described Alaska Native leaders                                                               
as "our  local knowledge holders."   She  said that in  the 1980s                                                               
Alaska Native  educators had used  innovations to help  create an                                                               
indigenous learning framework for  Maori students in New Zealand.                                                               
She advised  that it is  time for Alaska to  do the same,  as the                                                               
many Native experts in Alaska have not been utilized.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
8:24:22 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. MEDICINE  CROW pointed  out that  during the  last governor's                                                               
administration  an  education   outreach  challenge  had  created                                                               
innovative ideas to  revamp Alaska's education system.   The goal                                                               
had  been  to achieve  better  results  for students,  especially                                                               
Native students.   She  stated that  the innovation  consisted of                                                               
compacting with tribes,  which allows for tribal  knowledge to be                                                               
centered in education and utilized as  a framework, not just as a                                                               
subject or class.   She said that there are  education experts in                                                               
Alaska  who  could  help  shape  better  outcomes  for  students,                                                               
because being  a Native  has been  "weaponized against  us within                                                               
the education system in Alaska."                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
8:32:37 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. MEDICINE CROW shared that she  had moved to Juneau as a child                                                               
so  that  her  sister  would  have  access  to  more  educational                                                               
opportunities.   Her sister eventually  became the  first Tlingit                                                               
woman   to  graduate   from   the   Massachusetts  Institute   of                                                               
Technology.  She  stated that she and her  sister's successes are                                                               
attributed to their mother, who  ensured they were not denied the                                                               
opportunity to be in programs  for gifted students.  In reference                                                               
to  boarding  schools,  she  spoke  of  intergenerational  issues                                                               
resulting  from Native  culture, values,  and language  not being                                                               
taught  in schools.   With  the  passage of  the American  Indian                                                               
Religious Freedom  Act of 1978, she  said that she was  among the                                                               
first group of children who were  able to sing and dance in their                                                               
language.   She stated that  having a foundation of  village life                                                               
taught her  to care for the  community on the land  and waters of                                                               
Kake.  This had helped her  learn her identity and allowed her to                                                               
survive the public  school system of Juneau,  which she described                                                               
as having a "soft bigotry of low expectations."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:39:48 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. MEDICINE  CROW, for  the record,  expressed her  intention to                                                               
follow up to  the committee with a quote from  William Manning in                                                               
an  exchange with  Senator Lisa  Murkowski.   She  said that  Mr.                                                               
Manning had expressed  the hope that Native  children would learn                                                               
to be  stewards of  their communities again.   She  insisted that                                                               
mutual  and reciprocal  respect, along  with identity,  should be                                                               
pillars of the  education system in Alaska.  She  said, "In order                                                               
to go forward,  we have to go  back to what is  meaningful to our                                                               
people and create a system that reflects it."                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
8:50:41 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR.  MEDICINE  CROW  shared  a  quote by  the  New  Mexico  State                                                               
Senator,  Benny  Shendo,  who  said, "Don't  teach  me  about  my                                                               
culture,  use  my culture  to  teach  me."    She also  shared  a                                                               
rhetorical question from  Atirau Ohia, who said,  "What counts as                                                               
knowledge,  what  knowledge  counts,   and  who  decides?"    She                                                               
questioned  which standards  should be  used for  the success  of                                                               
Native  students  -  a  cultural  framework  which  supports  the                                                               
ability of Native students to  thrive, or a framework designed to                                                               
continue an  assimilationist educational philosophy.   She argued                                                               
that current  standards are not  constructed for  Native students                                                               
to thrive.  She emphasized  the importance of reformulating these                                                               
standards in  Alaska because  it could help  change "the  way the                                                               
educational system has been weaponized against us."                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
8:56:41 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LANCE  X'UNEI TWITCHELL,  PhD,  representing  self, presented  on                                                               
culturally responsive  education in Alaska [copy  enclosed in the                                                               
committee packet].   He stated that  he is a professor  of Alaska                                                               
Native  Languages at  the University  of Alaska  Southeast and  a                                                               
Council  Member of  the Alaska  Native Language  Preservation and                                                               
Advisory Council.  He shared that  he has his PhD in Hawaiian and                                                               
Indigenous Language and Culture  Revitalization.  He reminded the                                                               
committee that,  based on the  accelerating rates in  the decline                                                               
of  Native  languages, a  linguistic  emergency  was declared  in                                                               
2018.    He  argued  that,  since  that  time,  action  has  been                                                               
inadequate   because  all   Alaska  Native   languages  are   now                                                               
endangered.   He  stated  that more  than half  of  the 23  known                                                               
languages have ten or fewer known speakers.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
DR. TWITCHELL  advised that,  with the  help of  the legislature,                                                               
Alaska schools  could have  more effective  programs.   He listed                                                               
the  Native language  and literacy  programs in  Southeast Alaska                                                               
which  have produced  competent bilingual  readers and  speakers.                                                               
He  reiterated that  a language  crisis  was announced;  however,                                                               
substantive  legislation  has failed  to  develop  to combat  the                                                               
crisis.    Concerning language,  he  argued  that Alaska  Natives                                                               
deserve a  seat at the table  of public education.   He said that                                                               
the  Alaska  Reads Act  is  positive,  but  more could  be  done,                                                               
because the state's  education system has "bloody  hands" when it                                                               
comes  to Alaska  Native  languages.   He  spoke about  chemical-                                                               
soaked  rags  being  stuffed  into the  mouths  of  children  for                                                               
speaking their own languages and  other stories of torture shared                                                               
by  elders.   He asked  for  more than  inclusion and  culturally                                                               
responsive education.  He expressed  the desire for a shift which                                                               
would give  Alaska Natives a home  on their ancestral lands.   He                                                               
expressed  his support  for early  literacy  and urged  increased                                                               
support  for teachers  and students  through future  legislation.                                                               
He expressed the  necessity for a statewide  consortium on Alaska                                                               
Native languages  and a  graduation requirement  of at  least one                                                               
semester in an Alaska Native  language for Alaska Native language                                                               
teachers.    He   suggested  that  multinational  Native-language                                                               
leaders  should  collaborate on  a  plan  to further  incorporate                                                               
Alaska Native languages into the public school system.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:06:56 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. TWITCHELL,  responding to a  committee question,  stated that                                                               
the standards of education need to  be analyzed.  He stated that,                                                               
in his observations, students who succeed are typically non-                                                                    
Native.  He recalled that he  had asked a group of high-achieving                                                               
students about  William Paul, the  first Alaska Native  to become                                                               
an  attorney  and a  territorial  legislator.   He  related  that                                                               
William  Paul desegregated  Alaska's  schools  and earned  Alaska                                                               
Natives the right  to vote.  He emphasized  the unlikelihood that                                                               
students knew  of the  important Tlingit  historical figure.   He                                                               
expressed the belief that schools  teach Alaska Native peoples as                                                               
a "monolith," with  no specific names or histories.   He gave the                                                               
example  of   Hawaiian  language   schools  which   had  resisted                                                               
standardized  testing.    This  had risked  a  loss  of  funding;                                                               
however, they  now have a 100  percent graduation rate and  an 80                                                               
percent college placement rate.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
9:16:45 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. TWITCHELL recommended working  with the Alaska Native Studies                                                               
Council and the Alaska Native  Language Preservation and Advisory                                                               
Council to  develop Native-specific benchmarks for  every student                                                               
in  Alaska who  graduates high  school, and  this should  include                                                               
knowledge of regional and state  specific historical figures.  He                                                               
added that funding should be  put towards early childhood reading                                                               
in heritage languages, in addition to English.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
9:24:52 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR.  TWITCHELL expressed  the opinion  that the  Tlingit Culture,                                                               
Language, and  Literacy program  at Harborview  Elementary School                                                               
is   great,  as   students  in   the  program   are  at   a  near                                                               
conversational level  with the Tlingit language  by fourth grade;                                                               
unfortunately,  the  program ends  after  the  fifth grade.    He                                                               
expressed  the  hope  that  the program  is  expanded  to  middle                                                               
schools.   He added that  language nests are  also a part  of the                                                               
solution  to bring  heritage  languages back  from  the brink  of                                                               
extinction.   Not  only were  heritage languages  prohibited, but                                                               
parents had elected  for their children to speak  English to keep                                                               
them from  experiencing violence  and discrimination.   He stated                                                               
that language nests are promising  programs for the future of the                                                               
Tlingit language.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:30:05 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TERRI  WALKER, Superintendent,  Northwest  Arctic Borough  School                                                               
District,  presented   on  culturally  responsive   education  in                                                               
Alaska.    She  discussed  the Inuit  Circumpolar  Council  which                                                               
established  an  education  steering   group.    This  group  led                                                               
workshops  to  develop  an Alaskan  Inuit  education  improvement                                                               
strategy, with  the goals of  defining education success  from an                                                               
Inuit perspective.   The workshops reviewed the  current state of                                                               
Inuit  education in  Alaska  and  identified recommendations  for                                                               
improvement.     She  stated   that  recommendations   were  then                                                               
transformed  into  an  educational  plan.   She  listed  the  six                                                               
measurable  objectives: indigenization  of education  frameworks,                                                               
education  policy  influence,   culture-based  curriculum,  Inuit                                                               
language   education,   educational  leadership   capacity,   and                                                               
traditional  parenting skills.   She  expressed the  opinion that                                                               
through  family and  community engagement,  students can  develop                                                               
pride in  self-identity and  respect for  elders.   She continued                                                               
that  culture-based curriculum  involves creating  a traditional-                                                               
knowledge  clearing house  specifically  for  Inuit research  and                                                               
resources.     She  added  that  the   sharing  of  culture-based                                                               
resources  and  instructional  strategies  should  be  encouraged                                                               
across  regions,  and  appropriate resources  should  be  created                                                               
using  local  knowledge.   She  suggested  that education  should                                                               
focus on the  whole child, with parents and  elders helping build                                                               
curriculum.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:39:33 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  WALKER described  building  a science  curriculum for  ninth                                                               
graders, including subjects involving  northern lights, snow, and                                                               
belugas.  She stated that  curriculum specialists have been hired                                                               
to develop Native language programs,  but funding is limited, and                                                               
the reading  curriculum is a  package from  the Lower 48  to help                                                               
teach  English.   She advised  that dual-language  programs would                                                               
better  help students  learn.   She  recommended screening  tools                                                               
over standardized assessments  and testing.  She  stated that the                                                               
goal should  be to create place-based,  socially relevant schools                                                               
which reflect the culture.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
9:51:33 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. TWITCHELL, in  a final statement, emphasized  the benefits of                                                               
a  more place-based  context  for learning.    He explained  that                                                               
under  the   current  system,  many  indigenous   peoples  reject                                                               
education  because  it  does  not reflect  them;  rather,  it  is                                                               
something to which they must conform.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:04:14 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
There being no  further business before the  committee, the House                                                               
Education Standing Committee meeting was adjourned at 10:04 a.m.                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
X'unei Twitchell Education Testimony 2022.pdf HEDC 2/28/2022 8:00:00 AM
Culturally Relevent Education in Alaska
USDE-Violations-of-NALA.pdf HEDC 2/28/2022 8:00:00 AM
Culturally Relevent Education in Alaska