Onderwerp:            U. Arizona American Indian Center Program
     Datum:            Sat, 29 Jan 2000 21:35:01
       Van:            KOLA <kolahq@skynet.be>
       Aan:            (Recipient list suppressed)
 
 
 

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[forwarded by Pat Morris. Thanks...]

http://news.excite.com:80/news/uw/000127/university-278

U. Arizona American Indian center program aims to integrate students

Updated 12:00 PM ET January 27, 2000
By La Monica Everett-Haynes
Arizona Daily Wildcat
U. Arizona

(U-WIRE) TUCSON, Ariz. -- Even though the University of Arizona
Native American Student Affairs Center has faced criticism in the
past for offering English classes limited to Native American students,
the director of the center said segregation is not the goal.

The program has encountered opposition from administrators,
news  reporters and students questioning whether the center is
an advocate of segregation, even though it is structured to
improve retention and graduation rates among its students, said
Bruce Meyers, director of NASA.

"We get this question all the time - it's people in our own backyard,
from our own students to administrators and faculty - they are
people who don't understand or don't want to understand
... because stereotypes and bigotry," Meyers said, adding that it is
not the majority but the occasional representative from each group.

Meyers said the center has received enough negative feedback
about the program to make a disturbance. Some people who don't
understand the purpose of the program have made claims of bias
against NASA, Meyers said.

"The real tragedy is when Native American students don't want to
use the services because they have internalized racism against
themselves ... and they believe the center is for deficient students,"
he said.

In a report issued at the end of last semester, only 63 percent of the
113 American Indian freshmen who entered the University of Arizona
in 1998 returned for a second year.

NASA has worked in collaboration with the English department to
provide for the American Indian Student Achievement program.

According to a 1997 survey conducted by the center, about 103
incoming freshmen from more than 50 tribes participated in the
program, Meyers said.

AISA - which Meyers called a bridge into the university culture -
consists of two remedial English courses taught specifically for
Native Indian students with intentions similar to UA's Courses in
Common.

"I didn't hear about the Native (English) class until after two class
meetings in the regular English course but (during those meetings)
I felt so out of place - I didn't feel like a source of enthusiasm," said
Brooke Dayzle, environmental science sophomore.

"It's rare that you see a Native American professor and lots of
students coming off the reservations when all they were ever around
were Native American students. So when they come here, it's a big
cultural shock to them," she said.

"When I came, I was in a period of transition, then I enrolled in the
Native American course and I felt more comfortable because there
were Native American students and the material that was being
taught was Native American material focusing on the culture," Dayzle
said.

There is a narrow difference between the work responsibility in the
Native Indian English courses and mainstream English courses,
said Larry Evers, head of the Department of English.

"The expectations and the standards are the same in the English
Department ... the difference is the Native American section provides
a bridge experience from reservation or Indian community settings
into the university community setting," Evers said.

"The course is one part in the coordinative effort to improve recruitment
and retention rates among Native American students in the critical
first year (because) we lost about 30 percent of all first-year students
and the Native American percentage is even higher than that," he
said.

The English courses are strictly optional to Native Indian students,
however it is encouraged considering the low percentage of graduation
rates among American Indians, Evers said.

Everest Wyaco, animal science freshman, said he did not take the
course because he felt comfortable enough to take mainstream
English courses, although he hoped to see more Native Indian
students.

"I took college preparatory courses in high school and I pretty much
got Cs and Bs in my English courses, but when I got here, I barely got
a C," said Wyaco, who contended he still felt confident about
mainstream English courses.

"I had a lot of good ideas, but I had to work on organizing them and
putting them onto paper (and) right now I feel more confident being
in English 101 even though there were mostly Anglos in the English
100 course and just two Native Americans," he said.

Wyaco added that although he felt confident, he would have felt more
comfortable and happier if there were more Native Indians in his
English courses.

"Since I moved down from the reservation, I am more spontaneous
and willing to meet a lot of people, but as long as there is more
Native Americans I feel more comfortable," he said.

Dayzle, who took both courses, said being with American Indian
students helped her become comfortable around different groups,
since she was surrounded by various tribal ethnicities.

"The courses helped me to where I felt comfortable speaking out and
forcing my opinions and I felt if I could do it," Dayzle said.

"Seeing an instructor who is Native American inspires students
because the instructor, herself, is a Native American," Dayzle said.
"Talking to other students who are in my class felt the same way ...
there was an understanding that they felt inspired by a teacher who
was also Native American."

--
(C) 2000 Arizona Daily Wildcat via U-WIRE
 

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