Tribal Talk
Immersion schools try to revive and preserve Native American languages
- By Michelle Nijhuis
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2003, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
The school has received visitors from other tribes, including the Tlingit of Alaska and the Pechanga of Southern California. The Washoe recently opened an immersion school in Nevada, and the Ojibwa have established several such programs in Minnesota and Wisconsin. In Montana, two other tribes have started their own immersion programs. Supporters say the impact runs deep. "This is a way to heal the identity confusion that so many of our students go through," says Joyce Silverthorne, a tribal education director and member of the Montana Board of Public Education. Through immersion, she says, students "become well grounded in who they are." In Indian Country, where the frequency of suicide among adolescents is more than double the national rate, such confidence can be, literally, a lifesaver.
"It makes kids proud to be Blackfeet," says Jesse DesRosier, who recently graduated from Real Speak but returns for language classes. "When I have kids, I want to try and put them in this school." And that's not all. "We beat the public school in flag football. We did all our plays in Indian, and the other team didn't know what we were saying. That's how we won."
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Comments (2)
Wow, I was wondering if someone can get me the address to that school. A man in my family was Blackfoot. I was hoping to get more info so i checked this article out. i have found what i was looking for. A way to learn the language.
Posted by Chelsie on May 8,2010 | 03:02 AM
Excellent article and excellent program. I wish we could do the same for our language for those stepping from the shadows in GA.
Posted by Becki Jones on September 16,2009 | 08:31 PM