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Wallace, Judi L.; Binau, David – Community and Junior College Journal, 1972
A program sponsored by Sheldon Jackson College (Alaska) educates and trains native Alaskans to work in the classrooms of their village schools as teacher aides or full-time staff. (RN)
Descriptors: Itinerant Teachers, Teacher Aides, Teacher Education, Two Year Colleges
Alaska State Dept. of Education, Juneau. – 1970
This evaluation attempts to measure the extent and effectiveness of ESEA Title I programs designed to meet the needs of disadvantaged children and apprizes the public and the legislature of program outcomes. In keeping with USOE requirements for evaluating Title I programs, this document is constructed of (1) responses to USOE probes by…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Gains, Community Involvement, Compensatory Education
Weeks, Denise Jarrett – Northwest Education, 2001
In rural Alaska villages, Native students benefit from having Native teachers who share their culture. Past and present efforts to increase the number of fully certified Native teachers include distance education courses, often taken by Native teacher aides; a fifth-year rural teacher internship for college graduates; and campus-based and…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, Alternative Teacher Certification, American Indian Education, Biculturalism
McDiarmid, G. Williamson; Larson, Eric; Hill, Alexandra – 2002
This report examines the demand for teachers, teacher turnover, and teacher education in Alaska. Surveys were conducted with school district personnel directors, directors of Alaska teacher education programs, teachers who exited Alaska schools in 2001, and rural and urban instructional aides. Alaska is facing teacher shortages, but these are…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Mobility
Johnson, Marilyn Kay; And Others – 1983
The geographic, enviornmental, and demographic conditions in Alaska create extreme difficulties for rural small school teachers who must cope with students with abilities ranging from gifted to retarded. Mainstreaming is taken for granted in Alaska where program development to aid rural teachers in providing special education services to their…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indian Education, Centralization, Delivery Systems