Jill Biden to visit tribal school still teaching remotely

Jill Biden is set to visit a small grade school on the outskirts of the Navajo Nation capital Friday

Via AP news wire
Friday 23 April 2021 13:58 BST
Jill Biden
Jill Biden (AFP or licensors)

A small grade school on the outskirts of the Navajo Nation capital is ready for students to return.

Staff at Hunters Point Boarding School in St. Michaels have repainted the building, upgraded the washer and dryer in the dorms, installed a security gate, placed plexiglass between beds and installed hand-washing stations.

Now, they are ready to show it off and talk about what else they can use as First Lady Jill Biden wraps up a three-day tour on Friday of the U.S. Southwest. High on the list is internet service and a new building to replace the one built in the 1960s.

Biden spent the first day of her trip to the Navajo Nation on Thursday listening to female tribal leaders whom she referred to as her “sister warriors” about the broader needs on the country’s largest Native American reservations.

The trip is Biden’s third to the vast reservation — which extends into Arizona, New Mexico and a corner of Utah — and her inaugural visit as first lady. She vowed to work with the Navajo Nation and all tribal nations, in a recognition of their inherent sovereignty and political relationship with the United States.

Genevieve Jackson, who sits on the school board in St. Michaels, said on windy days, the internet is “questionable” and has caused delays for standardized, online testing. Some of the school's equipment dates back more than a half-century, she said.

“We are a very poor nation and (Joe Biden) recognizes that we're an impoverished nation,” she said. “We're rich in culture and our teachings, but we need to catch up to the modern day of 2021. We need to be at par with all of the other private schools. We feel like we've been left out."

Hunters Point falls under the U.S. Bureau of Education, which oversees more than 180 schools in nearly two dozen states but directly operates less than one-third of them. Hunters Point is among those run by tribes or tribal organizations under contract with the federal government.

The schools have a tainted 19th century legacy from when Native American children were taken from their homes and sent to boarding schools. They are among the nation’s lowest performing, and have struggled with issues such as shoddy facilities.

Few people have been on the Hunters Point campus in the past year amid the pandemic.

Across the Navajo Nation, students have been learning remotely, some given flash drives with school work or paper packets if they have no access to computers. School buses have become Wi-Fi hotspots and delivered food to students' homes or at a central location when they couldn't navigate dirt roads that turn into a muddy, rutted mess when it rains or snows.

Virgilynn Denzpi, an educator at a school in the Window Rock area, was standing alongside the road Thursday hoping to get a glimpse of Jill Biden. She's hopeful Biden, who also is an educator, will understand the challenges teachers on the reservation have encountered during the pandemic.

“We’ve been so stressed out and overworked,” Denzpi said. “It’s like being a frontline worker, we’re the unsung heroes. I just wish the kids were back in the classrooms.”

Biden is expected to meet with a handful of students before visiting a vaccination site Friday.

In a normal year, students at Hunters Point stay in the dorms during the week and are bussed home on the weekends. Many come from single-parent families who struggle financially, Jackson said.

The school that serves kindergarten to fifth grade has used money from a federal virus relief package to provide laptops for students, and equipment for teachers to instruct remotely.

The Navajo Tribal Utility Authority estimates that expanding broadband across the 27,000-square mile (70,000 square-kilometer) reservation would cost more than $220 million. Tribal lawmakers like Daniel Tso said they realize they need to be more systematic in how to allocate the next round of federal virus relief funding.

Jackson said she's hopeful students at Hunters Point can return in the fall with the same opportunities as students in bigger cities.

“We are producing tomorrow's leaders, so we all share that dream and hope,” she said.

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