
Articles
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1 month ago |
bismarcktribune.com | Ted McDermott
Sage Fast Dog knows the importance of the federal system for educating Native Americans through the Bureau of Indian Education. But he also knows its flaws and limitations. Growing up on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota, he attended the St. Francis Indian School, a tribally operated school that relies on BIE funding. After college, Fast Dog spent nearly two decades as a teacher at SFIS, doing his best to make a difference in the lives of Native kids from within the BIE system.
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1 month ago |
bozemandailychronicle.com | Ted McDermott |Amelia Schafer
Sage Fast Dog knows the importance of the federal system for educating Native Americans through the Bureau of Indian Education. But he also knows its flaws and limitations. Growing up on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota, he attended the St. Francis Indian School, a tribally operated school that relies on BIE funding. After college, Fast Dog spent nearly two decades as a teacher at SFIS, doing his best to make a difference in the lives of Native kids from within the BIE system.
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1 month ago |
madison.com | Ted McDermott
Sage Fast Dog knows the importance of the federal system for educating Native Americans through the Bureau of Indian Education. But he also knows its flaws and limitations. Growing up on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota, he attended the St. Francis Indian School, a tribally operated school that relies on BIE funding. After college, Fast Dog spent nearly two decades as a teacher at SFIS, doing his best to make a difference in the lives of Native kids from within the BIE system.
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1 month ago |
richmond.com | Ted McDermott
Low test scores. Missing funds. Compromised student safety. Questionable medication practices. Deteriorating buildings. The Bureau of Indian Education — a sprawling federal system responsible for educating some 45,000 Native American students at 183 government-funded schools across the country — has been plagued with problems that have been called out in government reports and news investigations. On Feb.
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1 month ago |
rapidcityjournal.com | Ted McDermott
Low test scores. Missing funds. Compromised student safety. Questionable medication practices. Deteriorating buildings. The Bureau of Indian Education — a sprawling federal system responsible for educating some 45,000 Native American students at 183 government-funded schools across the country — has been plagued with problems that have been called out in government reports and news investigations. On Feb.
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