[Content]
Tue, 15 Sep 2009 15:13:00 PDT
Contact: Beth Luce, Communication Services, 253-692-4881
Symposium focuses on Native Americans in higher education
Native American students, their families and teachers will
join members of the University of Washington Tacoma community on Oct. 7 for
the second annual Symposium on Contemporary Native American Issues in Higher
Education.
"This symposium provides an opportunity for the tribal communities to come
to campus, learn about the university, and make connections that will help
them to be successful in their academic pursuits," said Sharon Parker, UW
Tacoma assistant chancellor for Equity and Diversity. "It's also an
opportunity for the UW Tacoma community to increase our understanding of
Native American students and learn how to attract them to higher education."
The event, which takes place in Philip Hall on the UW Tacoma campus, engages
participants in cross-cultural discussion about what it takes to become a
successful college student, including pre-college preparation, the
application process, course offerings, the role of culture in and out of the
classroom, and how an education can serve the tribal community.
The symposium is organized in two tracks, Parker noted. "If you want to know
about a college education and what that’s like, you can find that here," she
said. "If you want to discuss the issues and concerns of Native Americans in
higher education, we have that, too."
Open to students, parents, families, teachers, faculty members and
administrators, the symposium includes sessions and workshops throughout the
afternoon. Noted speakers include:
- Swil Kanim, an award-winning, virtuoso violinist of the Lummi Nation, calls himself a "violindian." He intertwines his original compositions with storytelling, poetry and audience interaction. Kanim is also a motivational speaker and actor, appearing in Sherman Alexie's award-winning movie, The Business of Fancydancing and in two dozen episodes of the television series, Northern Exposure. Kanim replaces Michael Pavel, who is unable to attend.
- Charlotte Coté is a member of the Nuu-chah-nulth Tribe
in Canada. She is a UW associate professor of American Indian Studies and
chair of the House of Knowledge Longhouse Project on the UW Seattle campus.
Her research centers on Native governance, politics, law and sovereignty in
the USA and Canada and her latest publication focuses on the whaling
practices of her tribe. Coté is active in the Puget Sound Native community,
serving on the board of the Potlatch Fund Foundation and as an executive
member of the Seattle Art Museum Native Arts Council.
- Billy Frank, of the Nisqually Indian Tribe, has served
as chair of the Northwest Indian Fish Commission for more than two decades.
He is known as a tribal rights and environmental activist and was honored
with the 1991 Albert Schweitzer Prize for Humanitarianism and the 2004
Indian Country Inaugural American Visionary Award. Frank will speak about
his experiences in the 1970s battle for fishing rights and his role as a
leader on issues of sovereignty. His talk will be followed by a showing of
the film As Long as the Rivers Run, a documentary of the struggles of
Northwest tribal people to maintain their fishing rights and way of life.
- Kristina Ackley is a researcher, writer and teacher
specializing in world indigenous people's studies, Native American studies,
anti-Indian movements and museum studies. She is a professor at The
Evergreen State College in Olympia, Wash., where she is teaching a course on
"American Frontiers: Homelands and Empire," that examines how 21st century
North American communities are wrestling with the legacies of colonization,
imperialism and migration. Ackley is a member of the Oneida Nation in
Wisconsin, and is of Bad River Chippewa descent.
For more information and to register, go to
www.tacoma.washington.edu/diversity or call Sharon Parker, assistant
chancellor for Equity and Diversity at UW Tacoma, 253-692-4861.