What do AQCANyou do when all your options for school kind of suck? That was the question some folks on the Standing Rock Reservation found themselves asking a couple of years ago. Young people were being bullied and harassed in public schools, and adults were worried that their kids weren't learning important tenets of Lakota language and culture. No one seemed thrilled with their options.
So a group of educators and parents decided to start their own school. It's called Mní Wičhóni Nakíčižiŋ Wóuŋspe or the Defenders of the Water School and it started during the movement against the Dakota Access Pipeline. Now, five years later, this place of learning operates nothing like other schools in the area. The plan is for students to fulfill an English credit with a prayer journey to the Black Hills. They'll earn a biology credit on a buffalo hunt. And they'll learn history from elders in their community.
It's an ambitious undertaking that's come up against many challenges: securing proper funding, getting state accreditation, not to mention building the actual school. But the people involved in the project are confident that if they can make this happen, it will transform the way that the next generation of students understand their traditions, identities, and themselves.
2025-05-02 21:16811 view
2025-05-02 20:591740 view
2025-05-02 20:432672 view
2025-05-02 20:012837 view
2025-05-02 19:551924 view
2025-05-02 19:44967 view
Reporter Alexi Horowitz-Ghazi's Aunt Vovi signed up for 23andMe back in 2017, hoping to learn more a
THE WOODLANDS, Texas — A bald eagle circled the sky to the right of the fourth tee box on Sunday as
Spoiler alert! We're discussing important plot plots and the ending of “Sasquatch Sunset” (in theate