Alaska Peninsula students and teachers get creative to meet requirements

Tyler Croom polishes the caribou antler he is turning into a cribbage board. (Photo by Avery Lill/KDLG)

There was a sharp, burnt smell in the air as seventh-grader, Tyler Croom, guided an electric polishing tool along the surface of a caribou antler with steady hands.

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A whirring, buzz filled his classroom at Meshik School in Port Heiden. The areas he had already polished gleamed bright and white.

“I’m making a cribbage board out of it,” Croom said, removing the surgical mask he wore to keep from breathing particles from the antler that he polished away. “I’m going to do scrimshaw in it, and we’re going to stain it brown. I’ve always wanted to make a cribbage board.”

The Lake and Peninsula School District is piloting a new calendar this year. They have dubbed it the “subsistence calendar.”

By starting later and ending earlier, the new calendar cuts 77.5 hours of instruction and saves more than $400,000.

The tricky part is students still have the same requirements they need to fulfill in a year, but they have less time to finish the standards.

That’s where project’s like Croom’s come become crucial. Kirsten Buckmaster is Croom’s teacher who is helping him with the project.

“We were able to tie in lots of different standards,” Buckmaster said. “He’ll have a writing component. He has science, engineering, arts and his cultural side.”

In addition to completing projects during the school year that fulfill a variety of requirements concurrently, students can also document summer activities, like commercial fishing, to count toward school standards.

While fulfilling school standards efficiently and effectively may be challenge, Kasie Luke, principal of Meshik School and Chignik Bay School, said that it is one of the new calendar’s most positive aspects.

“I think the main strengths really show in our students having spent more time with their families and doing what they do in their summer,” Luke said. “It gives them the opportunity to experience more place-based education opportunities and to really take advantage of their experiences in the summer to count as some of our standards toward their graduation requirements.”

For the 12 schools in the Lake and Peninsula School District, classes started Sept. 5 this year. School lets out May 1.

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