Title: ABORIGINAL EDUCATION NEEDS ASSESSMENT PROJECT
1ABORIGINAL EDUCATION NEEDS ASSESSMENT PROJECT
R.A. Malatest Associates Ltd. May 2001
2Needs Assessment ProjectAn Overview
- Survey Objectives
- Review of the Research Completed
- Highlights and Key Findings
- Summary and Recommendations
3Project Objectives
- Ascertain opinions about Aboriginal educational
issues from all target groups
- Review information gathered and identify
strengths and weaknesses of Aboriginal education
as perceived by the target groups - Provide recommendations as to how education for
Aboriginal learners could be improved
4Project Delivery
- Mailout, telephone and in-person surveys to 7
target groups - Total of 1724 responses
- Parents of Aboriginal students (226 telephone
surveys) - Parents of non-Aboriginal students (243 telephone
surveys) - Aboriginal students (330 school intercept
surveys, grades 5 to 12) - Non-Aboriginal students (549 school intercept
surveys, gr. 5-12) - Aboriginal former high school students (61
telephone surveys) - school staff (300 mail-out surveys)
- stakeholder interviews (15 interviews)
- Intercept surveys were conducted at 10 schools in
SD 91, and researchers also conducted two focus
groups with Aboriginal students and one with
Aboriginal parents
5Highlights and Key Findings
- Review of administrative data Aboriginal
student attendance and post-secondary
aspiration/status Review of issues associated
with Aboriginal education in the Nechako Lakes
School District - Staffing and training issues
- Target group analysis
- Transitions and retention
- Recommendations for enhancing Aboriginal
education - Other
6Aboriginal Students Face Considerable Challenges
7PSE Aspirations of SD 91 Students
A lower proportion of SD 91 Aboriginal students
plan to enroll in a PSE program
8Comparison of Aboriginal Students with SD 91
Students - Mean Score Basis
9Satisfaction with Overall Quality of Education
Provided to Aboriginal Learners in SD 91
Parents and school staff share similar
opinions with respect to satisfaction with the
quality of education provided to Aboriginal
learners.
10Satisfaction with Adequacy of Specific Curriculum
Needs
Curriculum meets needs of students in terms of
11Student Agreement With My teachers know a lot
about Aboriginal Culture/Issues
12Equal Educational Opportunities Provided for
Aboriginal Learners
13Aboriginal Students Receive the Same Treatment as
Others by Staff
14Support for Changes in School Curriculum -
Aboriginal Issues
15Communication with Aboriginal Parents
Dissatisfactory
16Suggestions for Improving Communication
- Parental participation (involvement) in education
(Staff 28.1) - Encourage increased attendance of parent/teacher
meetings (Staff 18.0) - Communication through Bands, going on reserves
(Staff 14.8) - Better utilization of Home School
Coordinators/Liaisons (Staff 14.8) - Sooner contact from school when problems begin to
arise (Parents 13.2) (and Non-Aboriginal
parents 11.5) - Promote more racial awareness and cross-cultural
understanding (Interview comment)
17Demand for Selected Aboriginal Support Mechanisms
18Support for Increased Aboriginal Representation
in Staff
Extent to Which Nechako Lakes District Schools
Should Actively Recruit Aboriginal Teachers
19Support for Greater Multicultural
Awareness/Training for Staff
20Issues of Agreement - Top 5 and Bottom 5 Nechako
Lakes District - Parents
21Issues of Agreement - Top 5 and Bottom 5 Nechako
Lakes District - Staff
22Issues of Agreement - Top 5 and Bottom 5
Aboriginal Secondary Students
23Example of Comments Generated as a Result of the
Survey
- The problem I see is in the early years. There
are not enough resources to help the children
that fall behind at an early ageMaybe if this
was paid attention to sooner, not so many kids
would drop out later when it gets too hard and
is too much work to follow...
Aboriginal Parent - Programs and activities should be provided on the
basis of need, not on race. This programs
exclusive to First Nations students does not
help improve relationships between Native and
non-Native students. Staff - Bus service would benefit any student, not just
Aboriginals, if they were interested in
extracurricular activities .
Aboriginal Parent - Career counselling for Aboriginal students would
be very valuable. It would give them goals to
help them stay in school. I never thought I had
choices. The kids today do have choices, but
Aboriginal kids need to have this idea reinforced
to them. They need to be aware of their
opportunities. Aboriginal Parent
24Recommendations for Nechako Lakes District Schools
Five key areas were identified for possible
initiatives
- Transition Retention Issues (2)
- Communication and Public Awareness (3)
- Accountability (4)
- Staffing Training (6)
- Program Modifications (Non-Curricular) (7)
- Native Cultural Awareness/Curriculum Issues (3)
Identification of 60 short-term (12 to 18 months)
action items and 46 long-term goals.
25Staffing Training - (6 Issues)
- Increase the proportion of Aboriginal Staff in SD
91 Schools - use of Aboriginal resource persons/teaching
assistants - efforts to attract Aboriginal teachers
- action plan to increase representation
- consider internship program for Aboriginal
teachers aides and/or Carrier Language
instructors - Clarification of the Role of the Native Support
Workers - focus on students with specific problems
- perform general liaison with school-Aboriginal
parents - coordinate cultural awareness activities for
staff/students/parents - offer academic support to students, with more
time devoted to individual student instruction
26Staffing Training - (6 Issues) (Continued)
- Establishment of a First Nations Liaison Worker
- role would involve providing educational
awareness, early childhood development awareness,
and communication services to Aboriginal parents - key contact between schools, staff, parents and
other social service organizations - Establishment of an Aboriginal Youth Outreach
Worker - evaluate the need for a Youth Outreach Worker,
whose duties would include initiation of
preventative and remedial action with Aboriginal
students to overcome challenges to high school
completion - develop policies and procedures to address the
social issues that affect Aboriginal student
attendance and academic success
27Staffing Training - (6 Issues) (Continued)
- Clarification of Roles of Native Home School
Coordinators and First Nations Education Council - utilize various sources (media, school
newsletters, and First Nations Support Workers)
to ensure Aboriginal community is aware of the
Home School Coordinator position as well as other
support programs offered in the District - incorporate higher visibility of First Nations
Education Council within the schools by
increasing person-to-person communications with
school students and staff - when publicizing, clearly outline the issues
addressed by, and the information provided by,
the Home School Coordinator, First Nations
Education Council, and District Principal -
Aboriginal Education
28Staffing Training - (6 Issues) (Continued)
- Promotion of Alternative Teaching Techniques to
School Instructional Staff - promote in-service activities focussing on
alternative learning styles - organize school staff visits to the various
Native communities to promote cross-cultural
understanding - examine the feasibility of establishing
alternative teaching methods (e.g., more visual
learning/more hands-on instruction) that
highlights the different learning styles and
background of Aboriginal learners - Provide Carrier language instructors with
teaching mentors (buddy system) when necessary,
for instructor training and class management
support
29Program Modifications (Non-Curricular) (7 Issues)
- Expand Support Mechanisms to Reduce Drop-Out
Rates - formal tracking system to provide heads up for
at-risk students - peer support groups, mentorship programs, other
- provide orientations to make students fully aware
of First Nations Support Workers and other
Aboriginal support programs in the District - Consider Establishing a Tutorial Program
- identify alternative/shared funding sources for
the provision of tutorial services - offer pilot tutorial service to establish the
demand for such a service among Aboriginal
learners - make available SD 91 facilities for this use,
especially computers - promote the use of Aboriginal instructors as
tutors
30Program Modifications (Non-Curricular) (7 Issues)
- Consider Establishing an Aboriginal Counselling
Service - designate a counsellor in each secondary school
to address Aboriginal student needs - the designated counsellor should receive specific
cultural awareness training designed to ensure
their familiarity with Aboriginal issues - Establishment of Effective Alternative Education
Program - establish an effective setting for an alternative
education program such as at a Band office or
possibly as an extension of a current Learning
Centre program - identify appropriate delivery models with
measurable benchmarks and tracking systems to
effectively manage alternative education models
31Program Modifications (Non-Curricular) (Continued)
- Support Aboriginal Involvement in Extracurricular
Activities - offer more support (financial/transportation and
otherwise) - evaluate funding barriers that would prevent
participation - Establish Aboriginal Support Groups
- for Aboriginal community/Aboriginal parents to
form support groups - for parenting workshops to discuss student/parent
issues (discipline, drug and alcohol abuse, etc.)
at an off-school site - Provide Better School to Career/Academic Prep
Mechanisms - ensure Aboriginal students receive adequate
counseling/ mentorship for goal-setting and
post-secondary guidance - develop relevant work/training programs or
apprenticeship programs, including links with
community industries
32Native Cultural Awareness/ Curriculum Issues (3
Issues)
- Enhance Aboriginal Content in SD 91 School
Curriculum - instructional staff to incorporate Native issues
into the existing curriculum - expand the availability of Carrier Language or
other First Nations language courses - Aboriginal community to work with SD 91 schools
to jointly develop relevant curriculum - evaluate the need to introduce additional senior
level courses in secondary schools focussing on
Aboriginal issues from an Aboriginal perspective
(Aboriginal government and history) as electives
33Native Cultural Awareness/ Curriculum Issues
(Continued)
- Cultural Awareness/Orientation for
School/District Staff - over one half (59.6) of staff of Aboriginal
ancestry (and 35.6 of all staff) saw the need
for greater Aboriginal awareness/training - 82.3 of parents surveyed felt that a greater
emphasis should be placed on Aboriginal awareness
and training for school staff - only 19.7 of Aboriginal secondary student felt
that their teachers knew a lot about Aboriginal
culture - promote an in-service for staff focussing on
multicultural awareness that also defines racism,
creates an awareness of how unconscious it can
be, and demonstrates social expectations - staff and Aboriginal community should interact to
promote positive reinforcement meetings should
not be limited solely to addressing problem
issues
34Native Cultural Awareness/ Curriculum Issues
(Continued)
- Utilization of Aboriginal Individuals as Role
Models in Schools for All Students - demonstrate to Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal
students that Aboriginals have succeeded - support establishment of an Aboriginal graduates
society - bring in Aboriginal persons (elders, parents,
members of the community) to act a resource
persons on a regular basis
35Transition and Retention (2 Issues)
- Early Childhood Development and Kindergarten
Entry - locate current early childhood education
pre-school programs and identify
culturally-sensitive opportunities to enhance
foundation skills among Aboriginal children - work toward goal of having Aboriginal children
demonstrate the same aptitude for selected
foundation skills as that of the general
population when entering the education system - Provide Intensive Tutorial/Learning Assistance
Services - elementary and secondary schools should identify
Aboriginal students who are academically
at-risk and provide intensive tutorial/learning
assistance - Invite Aboriginal Former Students to Serve as
Role Models - have Aboriginal high school graduates and
post-secondary students return to the schools to
address students on the importance of graduation - provide opportunities for Aboriginal former
students who have not graduated to return to the
schools to discuss barriers/challenges associated
with not having a diploma
36Communication and Public Awareness (3 Issues)
- Utilize Non-Traditional Communication Vehicles,
Parent-Teacher Meetings - parent-teacher meetings can held at non-school
locations such as Band offices on an annual or
bi-annual basis - incorporation of education meetings with other
Aboriginal community activities
(social/administrative) - assistance from the Home School
Coordinators/First Nations Support Workers as
conduits to parent community would also be
beneficial, as it was noted by many survey
participants that some parents do not have
telephones - Aboriginal Parent Newsletter
- simply worded newsletter and other
direct/indirect mechanisms, highlighting
accomplishments and success stories, and
publicizing educational activities - Formation of an Inter-Agency Aboriginal Education
Committee - FNEC to review interest in the establishment of
an inter-agency First Nations Education Committee
to share information as to the educational needs
of Aboriginal learners at the secondary and the
post-secondary level
37Accountability (4 Issues)
- Establishment of Short- and Long-Term Goals
- identification of short-term (2001/2002 school
year) and long term (2004/2005 and beyond) goals
and objectives - Formalization of Services to Be Provided by SD 91
Schools to the Aboriginal Community - formalize the responsibilities of the District
and Aboriginal community in terms of services,
goals and evaluation criteria - Establish Regular Evaluation Component
- annual evaluation to monitor District achievement
(attendance, GPA, staffing, etc.) - publication of report to Aboriginal community
(annual report)
38Accountability (Continued)
- Encourage Aboriginal Participation in
School/District Decision Making - Aboriginal participation on Board of Trustees,
Parent Advisory Committees - schools to work with Aboriginal communities to
have parents on school-parent advisory committees - co-evaluation of the job done by resources
targeting Aboriginal students - establishment of mechanisms to facilitate
evaluation of the success of Aboriginal education
programs in Nechako Lakes schools (e.g.,
attendance tracking system, graduation data,
academic achievement data)
39Aboriginal Education Needs Assessment Project
Summary
- Results of the study suggest that the education
system in SD 91 has improved but does not yet
adequately met the needs of Aboriginal learners
based on student attendance, achievement and
parent/student attitudes. - Target groups agree that a separate curriculum
(segregation) for Aboriginal students is not the
answer need for inclusion of more Aboriginal
studies in school curriculum. - Some gaps in opinions held by SD 91 staff and
Aboriginal parents with respect to problems and
solutions. Considerable dialogue will be
necessary with staff to ensure changes are
positively received. - The need for change is not limited to SD 91
schools. There is considerable scope for the
Aboriginal community to increase its
participation in the educational system in
Nechako Lakes District.