Rural Alaska teachers gain cultural insight at fish camp

Alaskan educators from around the region recently gathered in Council to do a little summer homework. Helping certify educators, Nome’s Northwest Campus hosted teacher camp, a unique opportunity to learn about the space where Alaskan schooling and Alaskan culture intersect.

Listen now

Salmon caught in a seine net in the eastern Norton Sound, just up the Bering Sea coast from Nome. (Photo by KNOM)
Salmon caught in a seine net in the eastern Norton Sound, just up the Bering Sea coast from Nome. (Photo by KNOM)

At teacher camp, that space is a packed living room in Tom and BeeJay Gray’s fish camp. Kathy Kysar, an English teacher from Unalakleet, says the opportunity to have in-depth discussion between Nome and village teachers is invaluable.

“Usually, we’ll have allotted maybe an hour and a half or two hours in the evening, and we’ll end up being there three or four.” Says Kysar, “it’s great to be around other educators who are so interested in the topic.”

Because of their differences, the conversation between village and non-village teachers offers fresh perspectives on topics like parent involvement and incorporating subsistence culture into classroom curriculum.

In addition to education conversation, teacher camp curriculum includes hands-on experience with the subsistence lifestyle. Camp attendees seined for fish, filleted fish, and picked blueberries to get a full understanding of subsistence activities. By the end of the week-long camp, the group could accurately identify species, gender, and general age of the fish they catch.

As first-time seiner and first-year teacher, Kelly Alexander says the work is hard but rewarding. Learning subsistence methods has given him a new appreciation of Alaskan culture. Alexander says, “[subsistence living] takes a lot of work and patience and dedication, so it makes me respect the people in this community and this state a lot more who go out and have to gather their food.”

Teachers will have the opportunity to show what they learned when school starts later this month. School starts August 22ndfor Nome Public Schools.

Tyler Stup is a reporter at KNOM in Nome.
Born and raised in Colorado, Tyler graduated from Colorado State University class of 2016. Majoring in economics, he sought a path that combined his studies and radio. When the opportunity came to do radio in Western Alaska he jumped at it the first chance he got. He’s been in radio for three-and-a-half years now and has loved every second of it.

Previous articleCompany makes a business out of playing in nature
Next articleAlaska restaurant serving elk fined for calling it reindeer