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The federal government provides elementary and secondary education and educational assistance to Indian children, either directly through federally funded schools or indirectly through educational assistance to public schools. Direct education is provided by the Bureau of Indian Education (BIE) in the U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI), through elementary and secondary schools funded by the BIE. Educational assistance to public schools is provided chiefly through programs of the U.S. Department of Education (ED). The student population served by federal Indian education programs consists of members (or descendants of members) of Indian tribes, not American Indians/Alaska Natives (AI/ANs), as identified by race/ethnicity. Most of this Indian education population attends public schools. Most federal data on Indian students are based on race/ethnicity, however, which complicates analysis of results for the population served by federal Indian education programs.
The BIE was originally part of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) in DOI. The BIA began the current system of direct Indian education in the decades following the Civil War, with congressional approval and funding. The system developed gradually to its current structure. In the late 19th century, the BIA began placing a few students in public schools, a trend that accelerated after about 1910. At present, over 90% of the Indian student population attends public schools.
The BIE-funded education system for Indian students includes 169 schools (and 14 "peripheral dormitories" for students attending public schools nearby). Schools and dorms may be operated by the BIE itself or by tribes and tribal organizations. A number of BIE programs provide funding and services, supplemented by set-asides for BIE schools from ED programs. Federal funding for Indian students in public schools flows to school districts chiefly through ED programs, with a small addition from a single BIE program. Most of the ED funds are authorized under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) and Individuals with Disabilities in Education Act (IDEA).
A perennial issue regarding Indian education is comparatively poor academic achievement among students in BIE schools and AI/AN students in public schools. Since the 1970s, federal policies to address this issue include permitting greater tribal control and influence through tribally operated BIE schools and culturally relevant educational curriculum and language instruction, and encouraging collaboration between states, local educational agencies, and public schools and tribes and parents of Indian students. ESEA standards and accountability requirements also aim to promote the academic achievement of students. With respect to BIE schools, Congress has wrestled to find a BIE administrative structure that will support greater academic achievement of BIE students. Other issues that Congress and Administrations have attempted to address are the condition of school facilities, the incidence of violence and alcohol and drug use among Indian students, the differential administration of discipline in public schools, and the adequacy of funding.
IntroductionThe federal government provides elementary and secondary education and educational assistance to Indian1 children, either directly through federally funded schools or indirectly through educational assistance to public schools. The Bureau of Indian Education (BIE)2 in the U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) oversees the federally funded BIE system of elementary and secondary schools. The BIE system is funded primarily by the BIE but also receives considerable funding from the U.S. Department of Education (ED). The public school systems of the states receive federal funding from ED, the BIE, and other federal agencies.
Federal provision of educational services and assistance to Indian children is based not on race/ethnicity but primarily on their membership in, eligibility for membership in, or familial relationship to members of Indian tribes, which are political entities. Federal Indian education programs are intended to serve Indian children who are members of, or, depending on the program, are at least second-degree descendants of members of, one of the 566567 tribal entities recognized and eligible for funding and services from the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) by virtue of their status as Indian tribes.3 The federal government considers its Indian education programs to be based on its trust relationship with Indian tribes, a responsibility derived from federal statutes, treaties, court decisions, executive actions, and the Constitution (which assigns authority over federal-Indian relations to Congress).4 Despite this trust relationship, Indian education programs are discretionary and not an entitlement like Medicare.
Indian children, as enrollees in public education, are also eligible for the federal government's general programs of educational assistance, but such programs are not Indian education programs and will not be discussed in this report.
This report provides a brief history of federal Indian education programs, a discussion of students served by these programs, an overview of the programs and their funding, a discussion of the application to BIE schools of key provisions of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, as amended by the No Child Left Behind Act (P.L. 107-110), programs and their funding, and brief discussions of selected issues in Indian education.
U.S. government concern with the education of Indians began with the Continental Congress, which in 1775 appropriated funds to pay expenses of 10 Indian students at Dartmouth College.5 Through the rest of the 18th century, the 19th century, and much of the 20th century, Congress's concern was for the civilization of the Indians, meaning their instruction in Euro-American agricultural methods, vocational skills, and habits, as well as in literacy, mathematics, and Christianity. The aim was to change Indians' cultural patterns into Euro-American ones—in a word, to assimilate them.6
From the Revolution until after the Civil War, the federal government provided for Indian education either by directly funding teachers or schools on a tribe-by-tribe basis pursuant to treaty provisions or by funding religious and other charitable groups to establish schools where they saw fit. The first Indian treaty providing for any form of education for a tribe—in this case, vocational—was in 1794.7 The first treaty providing for academic instruction for a tribe was in 1803.8 Altogether over 150 treaties with individual tribes provided for instructors, teachers, or schools, whether vocational, academic, or both, either permanently or for a limited period of time.9 The first U.S. statute authorizing appropriations to "promote civilization" among Indian tribes was the Indian Trade and Intercourse Act of 1793,10 but the Civilization Act of 1819 was the first authorization and appropriation specifically for instruction of Indian children near frontier settlements in reading, writing, and arithmetic.11 Civilization Act funds were expended through contracts with missionary and benevolent societies. Besides treaty schools and "mission" schools, some additional schools were initiated and funded directly by Indian tribes. The state of New York also operated schools for its Indian tribes. The total of such treaty, mission, tribal, and New York schools reached into the hundreds by the Civil War.12
After the Civil War, the U.S. government began to create a federal Indian school system, with schools not only funded but also constructed and operated by DOI's BIA with central policies and oversight.13 In 1869, the Board of Indian Commissioners—a federally appointed board that jointly controlled with DOI the disbursement of certain funds for Indians14—recommended the establishment of government schools and teachers.15 In 1870, Congress passed the first general appropriation for Indian schools not provided for under treaties.16 The initial appropriation was $100,000, but both the amount appropriated and the number of schools operated by the BIA rose swiftly thereafter.17 The BIA created both boarding and day schools, including off-reservation industrial boarding schools on the model of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School (established in 1879).18 Most BIA students attended on- or off-reservation boarding schools.19 BIA schools were chiefly elementary and vocational schools.20
An organizational structure for BIA education began with a Medical and Education Division during 1873-1881, appointment of a superintendent of education in 1883, and creation of an education division in 1884.21 The education of Alaska Native children, however, along with that of other Alaskan children, was assigned in 1885 to DOI's Office of Education, not the BIA.22 Mission, tribal,23 and New York state schools continued to operate, and the proportion of school-age Indian children attending a BIA, mission, tribal, or New York school rose slowly.24
A major long-term shift in federal Indian education policy, from federal schools to public schools, began in FY1890-FY1891 when the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, using his general authority in Indian affairs, contracted with a few local public school districts to educate nearby Indian children for whose schooling the BIA was responsible.25 After 1910, the BIA pushed to move Indian children to nearby public schools and to close BIA schools.26 Congress provided some appropriations to pay public schools for Indian students, although they were not always sufficient and moreover were not paid where state law entitled Indian students to public education.27
By 1920, more Indian students were in public schools than BIA schools.28 Figure 1 displays the changing number of Indian students in BIA, public, and other schools from 1900 to 1975. The shift to public schools accompanied the increase in the percentage of Indian youths attending any school, which rose from 40% in 1900 to 60% in 1930.29 Comparable data are no longer available.
In 1921, Congress passed the Snyder Act30 in order to authorize all programs the BIA was then carrying out. Most BIA programs at the time, including education, lacked authorizing legislation. The Snyder Act continues to provide broad and permanent authorization for federal Indian programs.
In 1934, to simplify the reimbursement of public schools for educating Indian students, Congress passed the Johnson-O'Malley (JOM) Act,31 authorizing the BIA to contract with the states, except Oklahoma, and the territories for the education of Indians (and other services to Indians).32
In the 1920s and 1930s, the BIA began expanding some of its own schools' grade levels to secondary education. Under the impetus of the Meriam Report and New Deal leadership, the BIA also began to shift its students toward its local day schools instead of its boarding schools, and, to some extent, to move its curriculum from solely Euro-American subjects to include Indian culture and vocational education.33 In addition in 1931, responsibility for Alaska Native education was transferred to the BIA.34
The first major non-DOI federal funding for Indian education in the 20th century began in 1953, when the Federal Assistance for Local Educational Agencies Affected by Federal Activities program,35 now known as Impact Aid, was amended to cover Indian children eligible for BIA schools.36 Impact Aid pays public school districts to help fund the education of children in "federally impacted areas." Further changes to the Impact Aid law in 1958 and the 1970s increased the funding that was allocated according to the number of children on Indian lands.37 Congressional appropriations for Impact Aid increased as the JOM funding decreased.
In 1966 Congress added further non-DOI funding for Indian education by amending the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) of 1965,38 the major act authorizing federal education aid to public school districts, to add set-asides for BIA schools to the program of grants to help educate students from low-income families; school library resources, textbook, and instructional materials; and supplementary educational centers and services.39
A congressional study of Indian education in the 1960s196940 that was highly critical of federal Indian education programs led to further expansion of federal non-DOI assistance for Indian education, embodied in the Indian Education Act of 1972, now known as ESEA Title VIIVI.41 The Indian Education Act established the Office of Indian Education (OIE) within the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and authorized OIE to make grants to local educational agencies (LEAs) with Indian children.42 The OIE was the first organization outside of DOI (since DOI's birth in 1849) that was created expressly to oversee a federal Indian education program.
Federal Indian education policy also began to move toward greater Indian control of federal Indian education programs, in both BIA and public schools. In 1966, the BIA signed its first contract with an Indian group to operate a BIA school (the Rough Rock Demonstration School on the Navajo Reservation).43 In 1975, through enactment of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (ISDEAA),44 Congress authorized all Indian tribes and tribal organizations, such as tribal school boards, to contract to operate their BIA schools. Three years later, in Title XI, Part B, of the Education Amendments of 1978, Congress required the BIA "to facilitate Indian control of Indian affairs in all matters relating to education."45 This act created statutory standards and administrative and funding requirements for the BIA school system and separated control of BIA schools from BIA area and agency officers by creating a BIA Office of Indian Education Programs (OIEP) and assigning it supervision of all BIA education personnel.46 Ten years later, the Tribally Controlled Schools Act (TCSA) of 198847 authorized grants to tribes and tribal organizations to operate their BIA schools. These laws provide that grants and self-determination contracts be for the same amounts of funding as the BIA would have expended on operation of the same schools.48
Indian control in public schools received an initial boost from the 1972 Indian Education Act. The ESEA Title VIIVI requires that public school districts applying for its new grants prove adequate participation by Indian parents and tribal communities in program development, operation, and evaluation.49 The 1972 Indian Education Act also amended the Impact Aid program to mandate Indian parents' consultation in school programs funded by Impact Aid.50 In 1975, the ISDEAA added to the JOM a requirement that public school districts with JOM contracts have either a majority-Indian school board or an Indian parent committee that has approved the JOM program.51 Finally, the Improving America's Schools Act of 1994 (P.L. 103-382, Section 9112(b)) authorized Indian tribes to apply for a grant in lieu of one or more LEAs under the ESEA Title VII formula grant program under certain circumstances.
The number of schools in the BIA school system has shrunk over the years,and the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA; P.L. 114-95) have expanded eligibility under the current ESEA Title VI formula grant program to Indian tribes; Indian organizations; Indian community-based organizations; and consortia of LEAs, Indian tribes, Indian organizations, and Indian community-based organizations.
Starting in the 1960s, the number of schools in the BIA school system began to shrink through administrative consolidation and congressional closures. For example, all BIA-funded schools in Alaska were transferred to the state of Alaska between 1966 and 1985, removing an estimated 120 schools from BIA responsibility.52 The number of BIA-funded schools and dormitories stood at 233 in 193053 and 277 in 1965,54 but fell to 227 in 1982 and to 180 in 1986 before rising to 185 by 1994;55 it currently stands at 183.56 Since the 1990s, Congress has limited both the number of BIA schools and the grade structure of the schools.57 The number of Indian students educated at BIA schools has for the last 20 years fluctuated between about 39,000 and 48,000numbered approximately 48,000 over the last 15 years.58 In 2006, the Secretary of the Interior separated the BIA education programs in the Office of Indian Education Programs from the rest of the BIA and placed them in a new Bureau of Indian Education (BIE) under the Assistant Secretary–Indian Affairs.59
It is commonly estimated that BIE schools serve less than 10% of Indian students, public schools serve over 90%, and private schools serve 1% or less. These general percentages, however, are not certain. Data on Indian students come from differing programs and sources. Different federal Indian education programs serve different, though overlapping, sets of Indian students. Their student data also differ (and overlap). In addition, it is unlikely that every school or school district that enrolls at least one Indian student receives funding from a federal program designed to serve Indian students or funded based on numbers of Indian students.
Although different federal Indian education programs have different eligibility criteria, none of the eligibility criteria are based solely on race/ethnicity. Eligibility is based on the political status of the groups of which the students are members or descendants of members.
The BIE school system, for instance, serves students who are members of federally recognized Indian tribes, or who are at least one-fourth degree Indian blood descendants of members of such tribes, and who reside on or near a federal Indian reservation or are eligible to attend a BIE off-reservation boarding school.60 Many Indian tribes allow less than one-fourth degree of tribal or Indian blood for membership, so many BIE Indian students have less than one-fourth Indian blood. Separately, the BIE's JOM program, according to its regulations, serves students in public schools who are at least one-fourth degree Indian blood and recognized by the BIA as eligible for BIA services.61
The ED ESEA Title VII-A programs, on the other hand, serve a broader set of students: (1) members of federally recognized tribes and their first and second degree descendants; (2) members of two types of non-federallynonfederally recognized tribes, state-recognized tribes and tribes whose federal recognition was terminated after 1940, and their first and second degree descendants; (3) members of an organized Indian group that received a grant under the ED Indian Education formula grant program as it was in effect before the passage of the Improving America's Schools Act of 1994;62 (4) Eskimos, Aleuts, or other Alaska Natives; and (5) individuals considered to be Indian by the Secretary of the Interior, for any purpose.63 Public school districts must have a minimum number or percentage of ESEA Title VII-eligible Indian students to receive a grant. The ESEA Title VII grants are administered by ED, so ED is the source of data on the ESEA Title VII students.
Another major ED program, the Impact Aid program, funds public schools whose students reside on "Indian lands" or are federally connected children.64 The students residing on Indian lands for whom Impact Aid is provided need not, however, be Indian.
Although there is no source for the status of Indian educational achievement nationally, the educational environment and achievements of BIE students and American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) students are reported. Students who identify their race/ethnicity as AI/AN may not be members or descendants of members of federally recognized Indian tribes, and not all members of such tribes may identify as AI/AN. For example, ED's National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), which collects and analyzes student and school data and produces the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP),65 publishes reports on AI/AN students' characteristics and academic achievements. NCES data are based on race/ethnicity (except most data on BIE students), so the data will include students who identify as AI/AN even though they are not members of tribes and do not fall into the eligibility categories of federal Indian education programs. NCES's race/ethnicity-based AI/AN student population is not the same as the student population served by federal Indian education programs. The two populations overlap, but the degree of overlap has not been determined. NCES data based on race/ethnicity, then, cannot be assumed to accurately represent the Indian student population served by federal Indian programs.
The BIE funds a system consisting of elementary and secondary schools, which provide free education to eligible Indian students, and "peripheral dormitories" (discussed below).66 In 2014 and before, the BIE system was administered by a director and headquarters offices in Washington, DC, and Albuquerque, NM; three Associate Deputy Directors (ADDs) in the west, east, and Navajo area; and 22 education line offices (ELOs) across Indian Country. ELOs provided leadership, technical support, and instructional support for the schools and peripheral dorms.67 Starting in June 2014, the Secretary began restructuring the BIE in an effort to increase tribal capacity to operate schools and improve educational outcomes. The new structure will have separate oversight through three ADDs for BIE operated schools, tribally operated schools, and schools serving the Navajo nationplanned structure maintains a director in Washington, DC. It has separate oversight through three ADDs—one serving schools serving the Navajo nation, one serving the remaining BIE operated schools, and one serving tribally operated schools. Fifteen Education Resource Centers (ERC), renamed and restructured ELOs, will report to the ADDs.68
The BIE-funded school system includes day and boarding schools and peripheral dormitories. The majority of BIE-funded schools are day schools, which offer elementary or secondary classes or combinations thereof and are located on Indian reservations. BIE boarding schools house students in dorms on campus and also offer elementary or secondary classes, or combinations of both levels, and are located both on and off reservations. The most common combinations of grade levels offered in BIE schools are K-8, K-12, K-6, and 9-12Approximately one-third of BIE schools are K-8; while another one-third are either K-12 or K-6.69 Peripheral dormitories house students who attend nearby public or BIE schools; these dorms are also located both on and off reservations.
Elementary and secondary schools funded by the BIE may be operated either directly by the BIE or by tribes and tribal organizations through grants or contracts authorized under the Tribally Controlled Schools Act (TCSA) of 1988 or the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (ISDEAA) of 1975, respectively. (See the discussion of these two acts in "Statutory Authority for BIE Elementary and Secondary Schools," below.) In addition, two schools, the Turtle Mountain Elementary and Middle schools in North Dakota,some schools are operated bythrough a cooperative agreement betweenwith a public school district and the BIE.70 As of March 2012, there were.70 In accordance with state law, the three BIE schools in Maine receive state funding.71 There are eight charter schools co-located at BIE schools.7172
BIE funds 169 schools and 14 peripheral dorms. Table 1 shows the number of BIE-funded schools and peripheral dorms, by type of operator. The majority of BIE-funded schools are tribally operated.7273
Schools and Peripheral |
Tribally |
BIE- |
Total |
Total |
126 |
57 |
183 |
Elementary/Secondary Schools |
113 |
56 |
169 |
Day schools |
88 |
30 |
118 |
Boarding schools |
25 |
26 |
51 |
Peripheral Dormitories |
13 |
1 |
14 |
Source: U.S. Department of the Interior, Indian Affairs, Budget Justifications Fiscal Year 2016 (hereafter8 (hereinafter referred to as the FY20168 Budget).
Until recentlyIn the mid-1990s, Congress became concerned that adding new BIE schools or expanding existing schools would, in circumstances of limited financial resources, "diminish funding for schools currently in the system."74 As a consequence, the total number of BIE schools and peripheral dorms, the class structure of each school, and co-located charter schools has been limited by Congress. Through annual appropriation acts from FY1994 through FY2011, Congress prohibited BIE from funding schools that were not in the BIE system as of September 1, 1996, and from FY1996 through FY2011 prohibited the use of BIE funds to expand a school's grade structure beyond the grades in place as of October 1, 1995. Appropriations acts since FY2000 have prohibited the establishment of co-located charter schools. Congress was concerned that adding new BIE schools or expanding existing schools would, in circumstances of limited financial resources, "diminish funding for schools currently in the system."73
Beginning in FY2012, Congress has begun to loosen restrictions on the size and scope of the BIE school system. The FY2012 appropriations act maintained thesethe aforementioned prohibitions except in the instance of schools and school programs that were closed and removed from the BIE school system between 1951 and 1972 and whose respective tribe's relationship with the federal government was terminated.7475 As a result in July 2012, BIE began funding grades 1-6 of Jones Academy in Hartshorne, OK. Jones Academy was previously funded by BIE as a peripheral dormitory for students attending schools in grades 1-12, and by the local public school district as a grades 1-6 elementary school. The FY2014 and FY2015 appropriations actsappropriations acts since FY2014 have authorized the Secretary to support the expansion of up to one additional grade to accomplish the BIE's mission.75 As a result, in 2014 the BIE approved funding for the tribally funded 6th grade of the otherwise BIE-funded Shoshone-Bannock Junior High.76
Only Indian children attend the BIE school system, with few exceptions. In SY2015-2016SY2016-2017, BIE-funded schools and peripheral dorms serve approximately 48,000 Indian students representing almost 250 tribes in 23 states.7778 For SY2012-2013–SY2014-2015, 60approximately 62% of BIE-funded schools and dorms averaged 200 or fewer children in attendance.78
BIE schools and dormitories are not evenly distributed across the country. From SY2012-2013 to SY2014-2015, almost 66% of BIE schools and dormitories and approximately 6665% of BIE students were located in 3 of the 23 states: Arizona (29% of students), New Mexico (21%), and South Dakota (16%). Table 2 shows the distribution of BIE schools and students across the 23 states. There are no BIE schools or students in Alaska, a circumstance directed by Congress (see "Brief History of Federal Indian Education Activities," above).79
Table 2. BIE Schools and Peripheral Dormitories and Students: Number and Percent, by State, Average SY2012-2013 to SY2014-2015
Descending Order of the Number of Students
State |
Schools and Dorms |
Students |
||
State |
Number |
Percent |
Number |
Percent |
Arizona |
54 |
|
12,002 |
29 |
New Mexico |
44 |
24 |
8,715 |
21 |
South Dakota |
22 |
12 |
6,428 |
|
North Dakota |
11 |
6 |
3,609 |
|
Mississippi |
8 |
4 |
2,053 |
5 |
Washington |
8 |
4 |
1,630 |
|
Oklahoma |
5 |
|
1,188 |
|
North Carolina |
1 |
|
982 |
2 |
Wisconsin |
3 |
|
798 |
|
Minnesota |
4 |
2 |
614 |
1 |
Montana |
3 |
1 |
469 |
1 |
California |
2 |
|
450 |
1 |
Michigan |
2 |
1 |
391 |
|
Utaha |
2 |
1 |
257 |
|
Oregon |
1 |
|
326 |
|
Maine |
3 |
1 |
278 |
|
Iowa |
1 |
|
265 |
|
Florida |
2 |
1 |
259 |
|
Wyoming |
1 |
|
191 |
0 |
Idaho |
2 |
1 |
191 |
0 |
Louisiana |
1 |
|
|
0 |
Nevada |
2 |
1 |
|
0 |
Kansas |
1 |
|
54 |
0 |
Totalb |
183 |
100.0% |
41, |
100.0% |
Source: FY2017 FY2016 Budget, Appendix 2.
Notes: Student counts are based on the three-year average daily membership, which counts students attendance during the entire year.
a.
Student counts and number of schools and dorms exclude Sevier-Richfield Public Schools in Utah, which receive BIE funds for the education of out-of-state students residing at the the BIE-funded Richfield Dormitory.
b.
Totals may not add due to rounding.
One measure of a school system's quality and the academic achievement of students is the percentage of schools that make adequate yearly progress (AYP). AYP is a measure of the percentage of students in a school that reach academic proficiency or a higher level of achievement compared to established targets. (For a broader discussion of AYP, see the subsequent section entitled "Adequate Yearly Progress.") According to the BIE, 36% of BIE schools made AYP in SY2012-2013—48% of BIE-operated schools and 30% of tribally operated schools.80 In comparison, 46% of all public schools made AYP in SY2011-2012.81 Starting with SY2012-2013, many school systems are no longer required to determine the percentage of schools making AYP.82
Another measure of educational achievement is the average score of students on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) reading and mathematics assessments.8381 Table 3 indicates that, on average, students in BIE schools score below students in public schools on the NAEP assessment. For example, on the 4th grade 2013 NAEP reading assessment all BIE school students scored an average of 181 while all public school students scored an average of 221.
Type of School |
Average NAEP Score |
|||||||||||||
Type of School |
Grade 4 Reading |
Grade 8 Reading |
Grade 4 Math |
Grade 8 Math |
||||||||||
2013 |
181 |
235 |
212 |
250 |
||||||||||
Public schools |
221 |
266 |
241 |
284
|
2015
|
BIE schools
|
NA
|
236
|
NA
|
252
|
Public schools
|
221
|
264
|
240 281 |
Source: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics, National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) Data Explorer, available at http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/naepdata/.
Notes: NA means reporting standards not met.
There were almostapproximately 50 million public school students enrolled in elementary and secondary schools in fall 20122013, and 534523,000 (1.10%) were AI/ANs.8482 In 2012-fall 2013 (the latest data available), approximately three-quarters (75%)80% of AI/AN students lived in the 13 states of Alaska, Arizona, California, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Washington.8516 states. These states, presented in descending order of their number of AI/AN students, are Oklahoma, Arizona, California, New Mexico, Alaska, North Carolina, Texas, Montana, New York, South Dakota, Minnesota, Washington, Michigan, Wisconsin, Oregon, and Florida.83 A greater than average proportion of AI/AN students live in poverty and require services for students with disabilities.8684 The percentage of AI/AN children under age 18 in families living in poverty was 3635% in 2013.87 In SY2012–132014.85 In SY2013–2014, the percentage of children and youthAI/AN children ages 3–21 who were served under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) as a percentage of total enrollment in public schools was highest for AI/AN students (16%) compared to other17%), the highest among all racial/ethnic groups.8886 The percentage of 16- through 24-year-old AI/AN students who were not enrolled in school and had not earned a high school credential was 1312% in 20122014, compared to 76% for all 16- through 24-year-olds. 89
The educational achievement of AI/AN students in public schools can be deduced from the average scores of AI/AN and non AI/AN students on the NAEP. Table 4 4 presents results of the 20132015 NAEP for AI/AN and non AI/AN students in grades 4, 8, and 12. The average NAEP score for AI/AN students is consistently lower than that for white and Asian/Pacific Islander students. In 4th grade reading, the average score for AI/AN students (206) is lower than the average score for white (231) and Asian/Pacific Islander (235) students but similar to that of black (205) and Hispanic (207)Although it is generally above the scores for black students and similar to the scores of Hispanic students.
Table 4. Average Public School Scores in NAEP Reading and Math, by Assessment and Select Student Characteristics: 2013
Student Characteristics |
Average NAEP Score |
|||||
Student Race/Ethnicity |
Grade 4 Reading |
Grade 8 Reading |
Grade 12 Reading |
Grade 4 Math |
Grade 8 Math |
Grade 12 Math |
AI/AN |
206 |
252 |
276 |
228 |
270 |
143 |
White |
231 |
275 |
296 |
250 |
293 |
161 |
Black |
205 |
250 |
267 |
224 |
263 |
131 |
Hispanic |
207 |
255 |
275 |
230 |
271 |
140 |
Asian/Pacific Islander |
235 |
279 |
296 |
258 |
306 |
172 |
Source: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics, National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) Data Explorer, available at http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/naepdata/.
Notes: AI/AN means American Indian/Alaska Native.
Federal Indian elementary and secondary education programs serve Indian elementary and secondary students in public schools, private schools, and the BIE system. Except for one BIE program, public schools do not generally receive BIE funding. Public schools instead receive most of their federal assistance for Indian education through the U.S. Department of Education (ED). BIE-funded schools, on the other hand, receive funding both from the BIE and from ED. The BIE estimates that it provides about 75% of BIE-funded schools' overall federal funding; ED provides 24%; and other sources such as other federal agencies provide, and ED provides the remainder.9088 This section of the report profiles first the BIE programs and second those ED programs that provide significant funding for Indian education.
Currently, BIE-funded schools, dorms, and programs are administered under a number of statutes. The key statutes are summarized here.
This act provides a broad and permanent authorization for federal Indian programs, including for "[g]eneral support and civilization, including education." The act was passed because Congress had never enacted specific statutory authorizations for most BIA activities, including BIA schools. Congress had instead made detailed annual appropriations for BIA activities. Authority for Indian appropriations in the House had been assigned to the Indian Affairs Committee after 1885 (and in the Senate to its Indian Affairs Committee after 1899). Rules changes in the House in 1920, however, moved Indian appropriations authority to the Appropriations Committee, making Indian appropriations vulnerable to procedural objections because they lacked authorizing acts. The Snyder Act was passed in order to authorize all the activities the BIA was then carrying out. The act's broad language, however, may be read as authorizing—though not requiring—nearly any Indian program, including education, for which Congress enacts appropriations.
ISDEAA, as amended, provides for tribal administration of certain federal Indian programs, including BIA and BIE programs. The act allows tribes to assume some control over the management of BIE-funded education programs by negotiating "self-determination contracts" or Title IV "self-governance compacts" with BIE for tribal management of specific schools or dorms. Under a self-determination contract, BIE transfers to tribal control the funds it would have spent for the contracted school or dorm, so the tribe may operate it. Tribes or tribal organizations may contract to operate one or more schools.93 Under a self-governance compact or funding agreement, tribes have the flexibility to redesign the programs to meet local needs and priorities. Funds provided under the Indian School Equalization Program (see subsequent section) are statutorily prohibited from being included in self-governance compacts. Tribes may reallocate funds from one program, service, function, or activity to another under self-governance compacts but not under self-determination contracts.
Title XI of this act, as amended by the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB; P.L. 107-110), "declares" federal policy on Indian education and establishes requirements and guidelines for the BIE-funded elementary and secondary school system. As amended, the act covers academic accreditation and standards, a funding allocation formula, BIE powers and functions, criteria for boarding and peripheral dorms, personnel hiring and firing, the role of school boards, facilities standards, a facilities construction priority system, and school closure rules, among other topics. It also authorizes several BIE grant programs, including administrative cost grants for tribally operated schools (described below), early childhood development program grants (also described below), and grants and technical assistance for tribal departments of education.
TCSA added grants as another means, besides ISDEAA contracts, by which Indian tribes and tribal organizations couldmay operate BIE-funded schools. The act requires that each grant include all funds that BIE would have allocated to the school for operation, administrative cost grants, transportation, maintenance, and ED programs. Because ISDEAA contracts were found to be a more cumbersome means of Indian control of schools, most tribally operated schools are grant schools.96 As of June 2011, approximately two-thirds of BIE schools and dormitories were funded by TCSA grants.97
Funding for and operation of BIE-funded schools are carried out through a number of different programs. The major BIE funding programs are "forward-funded"—that is, the BIE programs' appropriations for a fiscal year are used to fund the school year that begins during that fiscal year.9896 Forward funding in the case of elementary and secondary education programs was designed to allow additional time for school officials to develop budgets in advance of the beginning of the school year. These forward-funded appropriations are specified through provisions in the annual appropriations bill.
The Indian School Equalization Program (ISEP) is the formula-based grant program through which congressional appropriations for BIE-funded schools' academic (and, if applicable, residential) operating costs are allocated among the schools. Before allocation under the funding formula, part of ISEP funds are set aside for program adjustments, contingencies, and appeals. In recent years, program adjustments have funded safety and security projects, behavior intervention programs, targeted education projects to increase academic achievement, police services, and parental participation projects. The targeted education project from SY2005-2006 to SY2015-2016 was the FOCUS program, which supported at-risk students in schools that are close to making adequate yearly progress (AYP) by providing for technical assistance on effective teaching practices and data-driven instructional decision-making.100 The targeted program starting in SY2016-2017 is intended to build school staff capacity with respect to budget and programming.
ISEP formulaISEP grant funds are the primary funding for basic and supplemental educational programs for Indian students attending BIE-funded schools. In addition, ISEP formulagrant funds pay tuition to Sevier Public Schools in Utah for out-of-state Indian students living in the nearby BIE Richfield peripheral dormitory while attending Sevier. The ISEP. The ISEP allocation formula, although authorized under the Education Amendments of 1978, is specified not in statute but in federal regulations. The formula is based on a count of student "average daily membership" (ADM) that is weighted to take into account schools' grade levels and students' residential-living status (e.g., in boarding schools or peripheral dorms) and is then supplemented with weights or adjustments for gifted and talented students, language development needs, supplemental education programs, and a school's size. These weighted figures are calledThe final weighted figure is called the "weighted student units" (WSUs). Total WSUs are calculated for each school, by school year. unit" (WSU). A three-year WSU average is calculated for each school and nationally. Each school receives a portion of the ISEP appropriation that is the same proportion that the school's three-year WSU average is to the national three-year average WSU.101
Before allocation under the funding formula, part of ISEP funds are set aside for program adjustments, contingencies, and appeals. In recent years, program adjustments have funded safety and security projects, behavior intervention programs, targeted education projects to increase academic achievement, police services, and parental participation projects. The targeted education project from SY2005-2006 to SY2015-2016 was the FOCUS program, which supported at-risk students in schools that were close to making adequate yearly progress (AYP) by providing for technical assistance on effective teaching practices and data-driven instructional decision-making.99 The targeted program starting in SY2016-2017 is intended to build school staff capacity with respect to budget and programming.
To transport its students, both day and boarding, the BIE funds an extensive student transportation system. Student transportation funds provide for buses, fuel, maintenance, and bus driver salaries and training, as well as certain commercial transportation costs for some boarding school students. Because of largely rural and often remote school locations, many unimproved and dirt roads, and the long distances from children's homes to schools, transportation of BIE students can be expensive. Student transportation funds are distributed on a formula basis, using commercial transportation costs and the number of bus miles driven (with an additional weight for unimproved roads).102
BIE's early childhood development program funds the agency's Family and Child Education (FACE)provides grants to tribes and tribal organizations for services for pre-school Indian students and their parents.103 FACE programs include101 The program includes early childhood education for children under six years old, and parenting skills and adult education for their parents to improve their employment opportunities. The grants are distributed by formula among applicant tribes and organizations who meet the minimum tribal size of 500 members. From 1991 to 2013, FACE has served over 19,000 adults and 21,000 children at 61 different schools. 104102 In SY 2013-20142015-2016, the last full year for which data are available, 2,217129 adults and 2,116265 children were served.105
Tribal grant support costs,106104 formerly known as administrative cost grants, pay administrative and indirect costs for tribally operated TCSA-grant schools. Administrative costs for BIE-operated schools are funded through BIE program management appropriations. By providing assistance for direct and indirect administrative costs that may not be covered by ISEP or other BIE funds, administrative cost grants are intended to encourage tribes to take control of their schools. These are formula grants based on an "administrative cost percentage rate" for each school, with a minimum grant of $200,000.107 In SY2013-2014, the appropriation funded approximately 63% of the calculated need according to the formula For the first time in FY2016, appropriations fully funded the statutorily determined grant amounts without the need for a ratable reduction.
This program funds the operation of educational facilities at all BIE-funded schools and dorms. Operating expenses may include utilities, supplies, equipment, custodians, trash removal, maintenance of school grounds, minor repairs, and other services, as well as monitoring for fires and intrusions. This is not a forward-funded program. These funds are available at the beginning of the fiscal year for a period of 24 months.
This program funds preventive, routine cyclic, and unscheduled maintenance for all school buildings, equipment, utility systems, and ground structures. Like facilities operations funds, the funds are available at the beginning of the fiscal year for a period of 24 months. Appropriations for facilities maintenance were transferred from the BIA Construction account to the BIE account in FY2012.
Education Program Enhancements receive a line item in the appropriations request. This program allows the BIE discretion to target improvements to its educational programs through special studies, projects, and other activities. Funding in recent years has been used to improve reading and math achievement at particular schools, leadership training, professional development, mentoring programs, and to hire content-area experts. The BIE has been expanding its BIE Reads and Math Counts initiatives into additional grade levels and schools since SY2007-2008. BIE Reads is designed to improve reading outcomes among students reading below grade level. Math Counts supports schools with the lowest student performance in math.
The Residential Education Placement program ensured that eligible Indian students with disabilities or social or emotional needs received an appropriate education in the least restrictive environment and as close to home as possible. Services included physical and occupational therapy, counseling, and alcohol and substance abuse treatment. In SY2008-2009, the BIE served 59 institutionalized students.108105 The program was last funded in FY2011.
The Juvenile Detention Education program supported educational services for children in 24 BIA-funded detention facilities. This is not a forward-funded program. The program was last funded in FY2011FY2007-FY2011 and then again in FY2016.
The Secretary is authorized to make grants and provide technical assistance to tribes for the development and operation of tribal departments of education (TEDs) for the purpose of planning and coordinating all educational programs of the tribe. In FY2014, the Secretary awarded $1.2 million in Sovereignty in Indian Education (SIE) enhancement fundsBeginning in FY2015, funds have been awarded under the authority to promote tribal control and operation of BIE-funded schools on their reservations. In FY2015, the Secretary awarded grants to tribal nationsFunds have also been awarded to begin restructuring school governance, build capacity for academic success, and develop academically rigorous and culturally relevant curricula.
There is one program by which the BIE provides assistance to tribes, tribal organizations, states, and LEAs for Indian students attending public schools. The Johnson O'Malley (JOM) program provides supplementary financial assistance, through contracts, to meet the unique and specialized educational needs of eligible Indian students in public schools and non-sectarian private schools. Eligible Indian students, according to BIE regulations, are students in public schools who are at least one-quarter degree Indian blood and recognized by the BIA as eligible for BIA services.111108 BIE contracts with tribes and tribal organizations to distribute funds to schools or other programs providing JOM services, and it also contracts directly with states and public school districts for JOM programs. Most JOM funds are distributed through tribal contractors—88% as of FY2012.112109 Prospective contractors must have education plans that have been approved by an Indian education committee made up of parents of Indian students. Funds are to be used for supplemental programs, such as tutoring, other academic support, books, supplies, Native language classes, cultural activities, summer education programs, after-school activities, or a variety of other education-related needs. JOM funds may be used for general school operations only when a public school district cannot meet state educational standards or requirements without them, and enrollment in the district is at least 70% eligible Indian students.113
Enacted in 1934, the Johnson O'Malley Act authorized the Secretary of the Interior to contract directly with states, local governments (such as school districts), colleges, and private entities "for the education, medical attention, agricultural assistance, and social welfare, including relief of distress, of Indians in such State."114 Education eventually came to be the chief area of JOM contracting. After enactment of Impact Aid gave public school districts a separate and much larger source of federal funding for Indian students (see "Brief History of Federal Indian Education Activities," above), Indian groups argued that JOM funds should be used only for Indian students and not for districts' general operating costs. The BIA amended its regulations in 1974 to restrict school districts' use of JOM funds to supplementary programs purely for Indian students (the same regulations also made it clear that Indian tribes were eligible for JOM contracts).115 In 1985, Congress enacted a statute limiting JOM contracts to supplementary educational services for Indian students.116
By statute, JOM funds are distributed to contractors by formula, based on a count of Indian students and average per-pupil operating costs. Student counts for allocating funds have been effectively frozen since FY1995. The House and Senate reports, accompanying the DOI and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1995 (P.L. 103-332), instructed the BIA to transfer JOM allocations to tribal priority allocations (TPA) along with certain funds for housing improvement in an effort to stabilize funding for tribes and provide them additional control and flexibility in the use of the funds.117 The intention was to include the JOM funds in each tribe's recurring base funding. Based upon public comment and the appropriations reports, the BIA decided to use the FY1995 JOM allocations based on the FY1995 student counts to establish JOM base funding for each of the tribal contractors, excluding tribal organizations.118 There is a statutory prohibition on changing a tribe's base funding.119 This transfer to TPA has resulted in what is commonly referred to as the JOM freeze. In FY2005, JOM served about 272,000 students in 33 states.120 At the direction of Congress, the BIE is attempting to count the current number of students served110 This is not a forward-funded program.
The BIA funds repair, improvement, and construction activities for BIE schools and school facilities. Activities may include replacing all facilities on an existing BIE school campus, replacing individual buildings, or making minor and major repairs and improvements. Included in the education construction program is improvement and repair of BIE employee housing units. Construction may be administered either by the BIA or by tribes under the ISDEAA or the TCSA. In order to prioritize projects and guide expenditures, the BIA maintains an aggregate Facilities Condition Index (FCI), Asset Priorities Index (API), a Replacement School Construction Priority list, a Five Year Deferred Maintenance and Construction Plan, an Asset Management Plan (AMP), a list of necessary emergency repairs, and a list of deficiencies with respect to the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA; 42 U.S.C. §12101 et seq.), Uniform Federal Accessibility Standards (UFAS; 42 U.S.C. §§4151-4157), Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), and other requirements.
Indian Affairsaffairs (the budgetary combination of BIA and BIE functions) appropriations for elementary and secondary education are divided between program funds, expended through the BIE, and construction and related spending carried out through the BIA. Table 5 shows detailed appropriations for BIE programs and BIA education construction for FY2006-FY2015FY2007-FY2016.
In nominal dollars, total BIA and BIE spending on elementary-secondary education and construction has increased 0.210% over the 10-year period, from $749.2754 million to $751.1 million.831 million. In constant FY2016 dollars, total BIA and BIE spending on elementary-secondary education and construction has decreased 5% over the same 10-year period.111 Educational programming appropriations in nominal dollars for BIE elementary-secondary programs have risen 2526% over the same period, from $542.4549 million in FY2006 to $676.6FY2007 to $693 million in FY2015.121FY2016 in nominal dollars.112 Most of the increase is attributable to an increased appropriationappropriations for ISEP and Tribal Grant Support Costs, and transferring appropriations for facilities maintenance from the BIA Education Construction account to the BIE Elementary-Secondary Education account. As illustrated in Figure 32, and with the exception of FY2009, BIA education construction appropriations in nominal dollars have fallen 6433%, from $206.8205 million in FY2006 to $74.5FY2007 to $138 million in FY2015FY2016. Besides the facilities maintenance appropriation account transfer, this decrease is a result of lower appropriations for school and facility construction.
Figure 2. Appropriations for BIE Operations and BIA Education Construction, (in current dollars) |
Source: Figure Notes: BIA Education Construction includes a small amount of funds for BIA postsecondary institutions. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (P.L. 111-5) appropriated $292 million for replacement school construction and facilities improvement and repair. |
Table 5. Appropriations for BIE Elementary-Secondary Education Programs and BIA Education Construction, FY2006-FY2015
(current dollars in thousands)
FY2006 | FY2007 |
FY2008 |
FY2009 |
FY2009 ARRAa |
FY2010 |
FY2011 |
FY2012 |
FY2013 |
FY2014 |
FY2015 |
FY2016 |
|
BIE Elementary-Secondary Education |
542,420 | 549,293 |
577,863 |
600,881 |
— |
622,609 |
626,903 |
666,752 |
630,285 |
657,074 |
676,556 |
692,872 |
Elementary/Secondary ( |
457,750 | 458,310 |
479,895 |
499,470 |
— |
518,702 |
520,048 |
522,247 |
493,701 |
518,318 |
536,897 |
533,458 |
ISEP Formula Funds |
350,062 | 351,817 |
358,341 |
375,000 |
— |
391,699 |
390,361 |
390,707 |
368,992 |
384,404 |
386,565 391,837 |
|
ISEP Program Adjustments | 5,116 |
7,533 |
3,205 |
3,266 |
— |
3,338 |
3,331 |
5,278 |
5,019 |
5,324 |
5,353 5,401 |
|
Tribal Education Departments (TEDs) |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
2,000 |
|
Student Transportation |
42, |
|
47,844 |
50,500 |
— |
52,808 |
52,692 |
52,632 |
49,870 |
52,796 |
52,945 53,142 |
|
Early Childhood Development | 15,281 |
12,067 |
15,024 |
15,223 |
— |
15,374 |
15,341 |
15,345 |
14,564 |
15,451 |
15,520 15,620 |
|
Tribal Grant Support Costsb |
44, |
|
43,373 |
43,373 |
— |
43,373 |
46,280 |
46,253 |
43,834 |
48,253 |
62,395 73,276 |
|
Education Program Enhancements |
— |
— | 12,108 |
12,108 |
— |
12,110 |
12,043 |
12,032 |
11,422 |
12,090 |
12, 12,182 |
|
Elementary/Secondary Programs | 75,887 |
72,390 |
74,621 |
75,126 |
— |
77,379 |
76,939 |
122,534 |
116,326 |
118,402 |
119,195 134,263 |
|
Facilities Operation | 55,812 |
56,047 |
56,504 |
56,972 |
— |
59,410 |
59,149 |
58,565 |
55,521 |
55,668 |
55,865 63,098 |
|
Facilities Maintenancec |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
50,665 |
48, |
48, |
48,591 |
|
Residential Education Placement Programd |
3, |
|
3,715 |
3,737 |
— |
3,760 |
3,755 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
Juvenile Detention Education |
— |
630 |
620 |
620 |
— |
620 |
619 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
|
Johnson-O'Malley Program | 16,371 |
12,000 |
13,782 |
13,797 |
— |
13,589 |
13,416 |
13,304 |
12,615 |
14,338 |
14,739 14,778 |
|
Education Management | 8,783 |
18,593 |
23,347 |
26,285 |
— |
26,528 |
29,916 |
21,971 |
20,258 |
20,354 |
20,464 25,151 |
|
BIA Education Constructione |
206,787 | 204,956 |
142,935 |
128,837 |
292,311 |
112,994 |
140,509 |
70,826 |
52,779 |
55,285 |
74,501 138,245 |
|
Replacement School Construction | 64,530 |
83,891 |
46,716 |
22,405 |
141,634 |
5,964 |
21,463 |
17,807 |
— |
954 |
20,165 45,504 |
|
Replacement Facility Construction | — |
26,873 |
9,748 |
17,013 |
— |
17,013 |
29,466 |
— |
— |
— |
— 11,935 |
|
Employee Housing Repair |
1, |
|
1,942 |
4,445 |
— |
4,451 |
4,438 |
4,428 |
4,405 |
11,935 |
3,823 7,565 |
|
Education Facilities Improvement and Repair | 140,286 |
92,219 |
84,529 |
84,974 |
150,677 |
85,566 |
85,142 |
48,591 |
48,374 |
50,513 |
50,513 73,241 |
|
Total: BIE Elementary-Secondary Education and Education Construction |
749,207 | 754,249 |
720,798 |
729,718 |
292,311 |
735,603 |
767,412 |
737,578 |
683,064 |
712,359 |
751,057 831,117 |
Source: "Annual comprehensive budget table," in U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Budget Justifications and Performance Information, Fiscal Years 20052007-20167.
Notes: In this table, "BIA" includes all Indian programs under the Assistant Secretary–Indian Affairs in the Department of the Interior. Totals for BIE elementary-secondary education were calculated by CRS. N/A = not applicable.
Abbreviations:
BIA—Bureau of Indian Affairs
BIE—Bureau of Indian Education
ISEP—Indian School Equalization Program
a.
FY2009 ARRA funds were appropriated by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA; P.L. 111-5).
b.
Tribal grant support costs were previously entitled Administrative Cost Grants.
c.
Appropriations for facilities maintenance were transferred from the BIA Education Construction account to the BIE Elementary-Secondary Education account in FY2012.
d.
The Residential Education Placement Program was formerly called the Institutionalized Disabled Program.
e.
Education construction includes a small amount of funds for BIA postsecondary education institutions.
The U.S. Department of Education (ED) provides funding specifically for Indian elementary and secondary education to both public and BIE schools. About three-quarters of this Indian education-specific funding goes to public schools and related organizations (see Table 6 below).
ED's assistance specifically for Indian education is not to be confused with its general assistance to elementary and secondary education nationwide. Indian students benefit from ED's general assistance as they attend public schools. This section covers ED Indian assistance—that is, assistance statutorily specified for Indians or allotted according to the number of Indians—not general ED assistance that may also benefit Indian students.
ED Indian education funding to public and BIE schools flows through a number of programs, most authorized under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) or the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), although other acts also authorize Indian education assistance. ESEA amendments enacted through the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA; P.L. 114-95) become effective for AY2017-2018 for the programs described herein. For more information on IDEA programs, see CRS Report R41833, The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), Part B: Key Statutory and Regulatory Provisions, by Kyrie E. Dragoo; and CRS Report R43631, The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), Part C: Early Intervention for Infants and Toddlers with Disabilities, by Kyrie E. Dragoo.
Major ED Indian programs are profiled below. Some general ED programs have set-asides for BIE schools, while other programs either may be intended solely for Indian students, may specifically include Indian and non-Indian students, or may mention Indian students as a target of the assistance. In many instances, BIE schools are included in the definition of local educational agency (LEA) in the ESEA122113 and IDEA,123114 so many ED programs may provide funding to BIE schools even when the programs have no BIE set-aside or other specific provision for BIE schools, but these programs are not discussed here. Tribes and, tribal organizations, the BIE, and BIE schools are also specifically eligible to apply for certain programs, which are not described here. tribal organizations are also eligible to apply for certain programs.
Major ED Indian programs are profiled below. For more information on ESEA programs discussed below, see CRS Report RL33960, The Elementary and Secondary Education Act, as Amended by the No Child Left Behind Act: A Primer, by [author name scrubbed]. For more information on IDEA programs, see CRS Report R41833, The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), Part B: Key Statutory and Regulatory Provisions, by [author name scrubbed]; and CRS Report R43631, The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), Part C: Early Intervention for Infants and Toddlers with Disabilities, by [author name scrubbed].
Title I, Part A, of the ESEA authorizes formula grants to LEAs for the education of disadvantaged children. ESEA Title I-A grants go to LEAs to serve pupils in schools with relatively large numbers or percentages of children from low-income families, and are used to provide supplementary education services, as either schoolwide programs or targeted assistance to the lowest-achieving students. Section 1121 of the ESEA sets aside 1% of Title I-A appropriations for DOI and the outlying areas. DOI funds are for BIE schools and for out-of-state Indian students being educated in public schools under BIE contracts (e.g., students in peripheral dorms). The portion of the 1% provided to DOI is the amount determined by the Secretary of Education to be needed to meet the special educational needs of the Indian students (in recent years it has been approximately 70% of the total set-aside).124
The ESEA authorizes formula grants to states to support the development and implementation of state assessments and standards as required under ESEA Title I-A. ESEA Title I-B, as amended by ESSA, provides a set-aside of 0.5% for BIE. The ESEA authorizes formula grants to states that may be used for a variety of purposes related to the recruitment, retention, and professional development of K-12 teachers and school leaders. The ESEA Title II-A program, as amended by ESSA, provides a 0.5% set-aside of appropriations for programs in BIE schools. Title III, Part A of the ESEA authorizes formula grants to states to provide programs for and services to English learners (ELs), also known as limited English proficient (LEP) students, and immigrant students. The program is designed to help ensure that ELs and immigrant students attain English proficiency, develop high levels of academic achievement in English, and meet the same state academic standards that all students are expected to meet. The program provides a set-aside equal to the greater of 0.5% of appropriations or $5 million for Native American and Alaska Native Children in School. The set-aside is available to eligible Indian tribes, tribally sanctioned educational authorities, Native Hawaiian or Native American Pacific Islander native language educational organizations, BIE elementary and secondary schools, and consortia of BIE elementary and secondary schools.Title II, Part A, Subpart 1, of the ESEA125 authorizes grants to states for the recruitment, retention, and professional development of highly qualified teachers and principals in elementary and secondary schools. Section 2111(b)(1)(A)(ii) of the ESEA sets aside 0.5% of appropriations for programs in BIEprovide supplementary educational and related services to low-achieving and other students attending pre-kindergarten through grade 12 schools with relatively high concentrations of students from low-income families. ESEA, as amended by ESSA, reserves 0.4% for the outlying areas and 0.7% for DOI unless the set-asides result in the states receiving less than their aggregate FY2016 amount, in which case the provisions under ESEA prior to the enactment of ESSA are in effect.115 DOI funds are for BIE schools and for out-of-state Indian students being educated in public schools under BIE contracts (e.g., students in peripheral dorms).
ESEA Title I-B State Assessment Grants
schools.
Title IV, Part B, of the ESEA126 authorizes formula grants to states for activities that provide learning opportunities for school-aged children during non-school hours. States award competitive subgrants to LEAs and community organizations for before- and after-school activities that will advance student academic achievement. Section 4202(a)(3) of the ESEA sets asideThe program provides a set-aside of no more than 1% of Title IV-B appropriations for the BIE and the outlying areas. The portion of the 1% that goes to the BIE is determined by the Secretary of Education.
Part B of the IDEA authorizes formula grants to states to help them provide a free appropriate public education to children with disabilities. States make subgrants to LEAs. Funds may be used for salaries of teachers or other special-education personnel, education materials, transportation, occupational therapy, or other special-education services. Section 611(b)(2) of the IDEA reserves 1.226% of state-grant appropriations for DOI. Each appropriations act since the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2006 (P.L. 109-149) has limited the DOI set-aside to the prior year set-aside amount increased for inflation.127 As a consequence in FY2015, the DOI set-aside is now 0.82%. Section 611(h) of the IDEA directs the Secretary of the Interior to allocate 80% of the funds to BIE schools for special education for children aged 5-21 and 20% to tribes and tribal organizations on reservations with BIE schools for early identification of children with disabilities aged 3-5, parent training, and provision of direct services.
Part C of the IDEA authorizes a grant program to aid each state in implementing a system of early intervention services for infants and toddlers with disabilities and their families. Section 643(b) of the IDEA reserves 1.25% of state-grant appropriations for DOI to distribute to tribes and tribal organizations for the coordination of assistance in the provision of early intervention services by the states to infants and toddlers with disabilities and their families on reservations served by BIE schools.
Title VI, Part A, Subpart 1 of the ESEA, as amended by ESSA, authorizes formula grants for supplementary education programs to meet the educational and cultural needs of Indian students. LEAs, Indian tribes, Indian organizations, Indian community-based organizations, consortia of the aforementioned entities, and BIE schools are eligible for grants. For an LEA to be eligible, at least 10 Indian students must be enrolled or at least 25% of its total enrollment must be Indians (exempted from these requirements are LEAs in Alaska, California, and Oklahoma and LEAs located on or near an Indian reservation). An LEA's application must be approved by a local committee of family members of Indian students and other stakeholders. The Indian Education programs also authorize special competitive grant programs. One provides demonstration grants to develop innovative services and programs to improve Indian students' educational opportunities and achievement. Another competitive program provides for professional development grants to colleges, or tribes or LEAs in consortium with colleges, to train Indian individuals as teachers or other professionals. In addition, the Indian Education programs authorize national programs. For example, grants to tribes for education administrative planning and development are authorized. Funds are also authorized for the National Advisory Council on Indian Education (NACIE), which advises the Secretary of Education and Congress on Indian education. Title VI, Part C, of the ESEA authorizes competitive grants to Alaska Native organizations, educational entities with Native experience, and cultural and community organizations for supplemental education programs that address the educational needs of Alaska Native students, parents, and teachers. Grants may be used for development of curricula and educational materials, student enrichment in science and math, professional development, family literacy, home preschool instruction, cultural exchange, dropout prevention, and other programs.Impact Aid, Title VIII of the ESEA,ESEA Title VI-A Indian Education Programs
128116 which is defined as Indian trust and restricted lands,129117 lands conveyed to Alaska Native entities under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971,130118 public lands designated for Indian use, and certain lands used for low-rent housing.131 Impact Aid funds are distributed by formula directly to LEAs and are used for basic operating costs, special education, and facilities construction and maintenance. There is no requirement that the funds be used specifically or preferentially for the education of Indian students. There is, however, a requirement that Indian children participate on an equal basis with non-Indian children in all of the educational programs and activities provided by the LEA, including but not limited to those funded by Impact Aid. There is also a requirement that the LEA consult with the parents and tribes of children who reside on "Indian lands" concerning their education and to ensure that these children receive equal educational opportunities. A few BIE schools receive Impact Aid funding. ED indicates that about 113,000. ED indicates that about 113,500 students residing on Indian lands were used to determine formula allocations under Impact Aid for FY2015.132119 The amount of Impact Aid funding going to LEAs based on the number of children residing on Indian lands makes it the largest ED Indian education program. A few BIE schools receive Impact Aid funding.
Title VII, Part A, of the ESEA134 authorizes formula grants to eligible LEAs, BIE schools, and (in certain circumstances) Indian tribes for supplementary education programs to assist Indian students in meeting challenging state standards. The supplementary programs can include tutoring, after-school programs, dropout prevention, early childhood and family programs, culturally related activities, and many other activities. For an LEA to be eligible, at least 10 Indian students must be enrolled or at least 25% of its total enrollment must be Indians (exempted from these requirements are LEAs in Alaska, California, and Oklahoma and LEAs located on or near an Indian reservation). An LEA's application must be approved by a local Indian education committee of parents, teachers, and secondary students.
The Indian Education programs also authorize several competitive grant programs. One provides demonstration grants to develop innovative services and programs to improve Indian students' educational opportunities and achievement. LEAs, colleges, tribes and tribal organizations, and BIE schools are eligible for these grants. In FY2015, ED made awards under a new demonstration program entitled Native Youth Community Projects (NYCP) to support community-driven strategies to improve college-and career-readiness of Native youth.
Another competitive program provides for professional development grants to colleges, or tribes or LEAs in consortium with colleges, to train Indian individuals as teachers or other professionals. In addition, the Indian Education programs authorize national programs for in-service training for teachers of Indian children, fellowships for Indian students, initiatives for gifted and talented Indian students, grants to tribes for education administrative planning and development, initiatives to improve the educational opportunities for adult Indians, and also the National Advisory Council on Indian Education (NACIE), which advises the Secretary of Education and Congress on Indian education.
The 2012 appropriations conference report instructed ED to expend $2 million under Title VII, Part A, of the ESEA for a national activities pilot program promoting Indian self-determination.135 The FY2012 STEP awards allowed tribal education departments (TEDs) in collaboration with states to administer some ESEA programs within selected schools or districts located on Indian reservations or former Indian reservations located in Oklahoma and build the capacity of the TED to administer such programs. The FY2015 STEP awards encourage collaboration between TEDs and SEAs and LEAs to conduct ESEA state formula grant administrative functions at least two schools, including at least one public school, and build TEA capacity.
Title VII, Part C, of the ESEA136 authorizes competitive grants to Alaska Native organizations, educational entities with Native experience, and cultural and community organizations for supplemental education programs that address the educational needs of Alaska Native students, parents, and teachers. Grants may be used for development of curricula and educational materials, student enrichment in science and math, professional development, family literacy, home preschool instruction, cultural exchange, dropout prevention, and other programs.
ED Indian education funding goes primarily to public schools and related organizations. With the exception of FY2009, less than a quarter of ED Indian education funds is set aside for BIE schools (see Figure 3). FY2009 funding was augmented by additional appropriations from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA; P.L. 111-5). The total ED Indian education program funding pattern during FY2006-FY2015 showed a steady increase, excluding funding from ARRA, from FY2006 ($0.969 billion) to FY2012 ($1.084 billion), followed by a 6% decline in FY2013. The FY2013 decline was primarily a result of sequestration.137 Although funding has increased since FY2013, the FY2015 level ($1.060 billion) is lower than the pre-sequester FY2012 level (see Table 6).
Part B of the IDEA authorizes formula grants to states to help them provide a free appropriate public education to children with disabilities. States make subgrants to LEAs. Funds may be used for salaries of teachers or other special education personnel, education materials, transportation, special education services, and occupational therapy or other related services. Section 611(b)(2) of the IDEA reserves 1.226% of state-grant appropriations for DOI. Each appropriations act since the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2006 (P.L. 109-149) has limited the DOI set-aside to the prior-year set-aside amount increased for inflation.120 As a consequence, in FY2016 the DOI set-aside is 0.79%. Section 611(h) of the IDEA directs the Secretary of the Interior to allocate 80% of the funds to BIE schools for special education for children aged 5-21 and 20% to tribes and tribal organizations on reservations with BIE schools for early identification of children with disabilities aged 3-5, parent training, and provision of direct services. Part C of the IDEA authorizes a grant program to aid each state in implementing a system of early intervention services for infants and toddlers with disabilities and their families. Section 643(b) of the IDEA reserves 1.25% of state-grant appropriations for DOI to distribute to tribes and tribal organizations for the coordination of assistance in the provision of early intervention services by the states to infants and toddlers with disabilities and their families on reservations served by BIE schools. Title VII, Part B, of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (MVHAA; 42 U.S.C. §§11431-11435) authorizes the Education for Homeless Children and Youth (EHCY) program. The program provides assistance to SEAs to ensure that all homeless children and youth have equal access to the same free appropriate public education, including public preschool education that is provided to other children and youth. The program provides a 1.0% set-aside of the appropriation to DOI for services provided by BIE to homeless children and youth. Title I of the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act of 2006 (Perkins IV; P.L. 109-270) authorizes formula grants to states to support the development of career and technical skills among students in secondary and postsecondary education. The program provides a 1.25% set-aside for the Native American Career and Technical Education Program (NACTEP). Eligible entities for NACTEP funds include federally organized Indian tribes, tribal organizations, Alaska Native entities, and consortia of such, as well as BIE schools.121 Impact Aid is the largest single ED
IDEA Part B Special Education Grants to States
Title V-A Indian Education programs provide over 10% of the total funding. Other ED programs—focused on Alaska Natives, career and technical education, early childhood education, and English language acquisition—account for about 8% of the ED funding provided for Indian education.
Table 6. Estimated Funding for Department of Education's Indian Elementary-Secondary Education Programs, in Descending Order of FY2015 Funding: FY2006-FY2015
(current dollars in thousands)
Education Department (ED) Programs |
FY2006 |
FY2007 |
FY2008 |
FY2009 |
|
FY 2010 |
FY 2011 |
FY 2012 |
FY 2013 |
FY 2014 |
FY 2015 |
||||||||||||||||||||
ED Funds Set-Aside for the BIE |
217,111 |
ARRAa
FY2010 FY2011 FY2012 FY2013 FY2014 FY2015 FY2016 Total ED Indian Elementary-Secondary Education Programs 980,780 1,003,941 1,059,633 170,457 1,059,807 1,070,522 1,084,371 1,017,562 1,049,657 1,060,280 1,119,481 Subtotal of ED Funds Set-Aside for the BIE |
228,676 |
235,295 |
98,758 |
229,009 |
225,986 |
223,480 |
216,666 |
217,872 |
216,883 225,198 |
||||||||||||||||||||
Percentage of Total |
|
23% |
|
|
|
|
21% |
21% |
21% |
|
20% |
||||||||||||||||||||
IDEA Part B Special Education Grants to States |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
92, |
93, |
94,009 |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA Title I-A Grants to Local Educational Agencies |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
93, |
|
93,711 |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA Title II-A Improving Teacher Quality State Grants |
14, |
|
14,603 |
14,665 |
- |
14,665 |
12,263 |
12,271 |
11,631 |
11,690 |
11,690 11,690 |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA Title IV-B 21st Century Community Learning Centers |
7, |
|
8,070 |
8,163 |
- |
8,433 |
8,304 |
8,416 |
7,650 |
8,055 |
7,892 |
8,244 |
|||||||||||||||||||
IDEA Part C Grants for Infants and Families with Disabilities |
5,388 |
5, |
|
5,623 |
- |
5,623 |
5,291 |
5,342 |
5,181 |
5,414 |
5,414 |
5,661 |
|||||||||||||||||||
ESEA Title I, | - |
877 |
3,322 |
3,793 |
20,870 |
3,682 |
3,671 |
3,332 |
3,152 |
3,091 |
3,091 | ||||||||||||||||||||
McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act Title VII-B Homeless Children and Youth
|
2,808 ESEA State Assessment Grants |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
650 |
|||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
425 |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA Title VI- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA Title IV-A Safe and Drug-Free Schools c |
4,750 |
4,750 |
4,750 |
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
|
- |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA Title II-D Educational Technology State Grants c |
2,001 |
|
1, |
|
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA Title I-B-4 Literacy through School Libraries | 97 |
195 |
96 |
96 |
- |
96 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
|||||||||||||||||||
ESEA Title I-B Reading First b |
5,146 |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
||||||||||||||||||||
Subtotal of Other ED Funds for Indian Education |
752,341 | 758,702 |
775,265 |
824,339 |
71,698 |
830,798 |
844,536 |
860,891 |
800,897 |
831,785 |
843,396 894,282 |
||||||||||||||||||||
Percentage of Total |
|
77% |
|
|
|
|
79% |
79% |
79% |
|
80% |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA | 515,813 |
520,436 |
528,558 |
573,448 |
- |
577,105 |
592,445 |
602,846 |
555,688 |
591,392 |
592,642 626,138 |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA |
95,331 |
|
96,613 |
99,331 |
- |
104,331 |
104,122 |
105,851 |
100,381 |
100,381 |
100,381 100,381 |
||||||||||||||||||||
Voc. Rehab. For AIs with Disabilities |
|
|
34,892 |
36,113 |
- |
42,899 |
43,550 |
37,898 |
37,224 |
37,201 |
39,160 |
43,000 |
|||||||||||||||||||
Alaska Native Education Equity |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
31,453 |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
19,827 |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
17,993 |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
- |
- |
|
|
|
- |
- |
|
|
|
17,406 |
||||||||||||||||||||
Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act Title I-D Native American Program |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
13,970 |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA |
3,960 |
3, |
|
3,891 |
- |
3,891 |
3,883 |
5,852 |
5,565 |
5,565 |
5,565 5,656 |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA Title III-A |
5,000 |
|
|
5,000 |
- |
5,000 |
4,950 |
5,000 |
5,000 |
5,000 |
5,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA Title VIII Impact Aid—Construction "Formula"
|
5,000 Special Ed. Parent Info. Centers |
|
|
- |
- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
- |
|||||||||||||||||||
Special Ed. Parent Info. Centers |
- |
|
|
|
- |
259 |
|
|
|
300 |
- |
||||||||||||||||||||
ESEA Title I-B-3 Even Start | 1,485 |
1,189 |
954 |
997 |
- |
997 |
- |
- |
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Total ED Indian Elementary-Secondary Education Programs |
969,452 |
980,780 |
1,003,941 |
1,059,633 |
170,457 |
1,059,807 |
1,070,522 - - |
1,084,371 |
1,017,562 |
1,049,657 |
1,060,280 |
Source: U.S. Department of Education, Budget Service, unpublished tables, transmitted on various dates, 2003-20132008-2017. The most recent table was transmitted January 13, 2015February 13, 2017.
Notes: Columns may not sum to totals due to rounding.
Abbreviations:
ED—U.S. Department of Education
ESEA—Elementary and Secondary Education Act
.IDEA—Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
LEA—Local educational agency (school district)
MVHAA—McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act Perkins—Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act of 2006.a.
FY2009 ARRA funds were appropriated by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA; P.L. 111-5).
b.
Some grants are awarded to BIE schools.
c.
).
b. This program was not reauthorized by the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA; P.L. 114-95).
c. This program was not specifically reauthorized by the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA; P.L. 114-95). The ESSA authorizes the Student Support and Academic Enrichment Grants program (Title IV-A-1), which provides a 0.5% set-aside for BIE schools to support a well-rounded education, school safety, and technology use.
d. Some grants are awarded to BIE schools.
e. Estimated by ED based on historical data.
Some of the issues of concern with regard to Indian education pertain to the comparatively poor academic outcomes of Indian students, Indian communities' desire for greater control of education, the effect of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) on Bureau of Indian Education (BIE) schools, the poor condition of BIE school facilities, and the allocation of Johnson O'Malley funds.138 The federal government has been actively engaged in addressing these issues in a holistic manner in hopes of ultimately increasing the academic achievement of Indian students.
In 2011, the President signed Executive Order 13592, Improving American Indian and Alaska Native Educational Opportunities and Strengthening Tribal Colleges and Universities. The order commits Department of the Interior (DOI) and Department of Education (ED) to tribal self-determination; Native language, culture, and history education; and to working to provide a quality education for American Indians and Alaska Natives. As a consequence of the order, the departments signed a 2012 agreement to cement and designate the responsibilities of their collaboration toward fulfilling the order.
In recent years, Congress has also supported efforts to address these issues. Beginning in 2012, Congress has appropriated funds specifically to promote tribal self-determination through the ED State-Tribal Education Partnership (STEP) program and the BIE Tribal Departments of Education program. Authorizingwith respect to public schools. Several ESEA provisions adopted through ESSA are designed to increase Indian and tribal influence in public schools. In recent years, authorizing and appropriating committees have held hearings to understandon the condition of BIE school facilities and determine a path forward. In addition, Congress has required BIE to address the process for reallocating Johnson O'Malley funds. Finally, Congress may bolster Indian education through a reauthorized ESEA.
There are significant gaps in educational outcomes for Indian students in BIE schools and American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) students in public schools compared to other students. For more information on educational outsomesoutcomes, see the earlier section entitled "Status of Indian and American Indian/Alaska Native Education." As noted in the ESEA, "it is the policy of the United States to fulfill the federal government's unique and continuing trust relationship with and responsibility to the Indian people for the education of Indian children."139124 Title 25 of the U.S. Code also refers to "the federal responsibility for and assistance to education of Indian children."140125
There have beenIn prior decades, there were consistent calls to increase the use of native language instruction to increase cultural relevance and improve overall academic performance. One argument contends that language, culture, and identity are intertwined and thus are important to the tribal identity. While the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) and other federal laws support native language instruction, native language proficiency is not part of the NCLB accountability provisions and thus may not be prioritized.
There is not consensus in the research literature regarding the relative effectiveness of native language instruction. One commonly cited review of research studies with control groups, for instance, suggests that bilingual instruction in some instances was found to improve English reading proficiency in comparison to English immersion, but in other instances it had no impact. This review focused principally on studies conducted prior to 1996 and examining instruction for Spanish-speaking elementary school children, and many of the studies have limitations. The one study of Indian native language students included in the review found no significant difference in English reading outcomes between bilingual and English-immersion instruction.141126 Some longitudinal studies prior to 2007 indicated that native language immersion students achieved higher scores on assessments of English and math than native students who did not receive native language immersion.127 However, a more recent review of the literature suggests that rigorous Native language and culture programs sustain non-English academic achievement, build English proficiency, and enhance student motivation.142
The National Indian Education Association encourages incorporating native language instruction, assessments, and teacher qualifications into ESEA Titles I and III for public and BIE schools.143 The challenges of native language instruction are the multitude of native languages that may be spoken in a single classroom, developing and maintaining qualified instructors, and developing and maintaining assessments.
There are federal programs that support native language acquisition:
There are several federal programs that support native language acquisition:
Tribal representatives have indicated that violence and alcohol and drug use are serious community issues that affect students and their ability to learn. A high incidence of substance abuse in Indian country communities contributes to or is symptomatic of high levels of depression, domestic violence, suicide, disease, death, and other situations that are not conducive to learning. Among persons aged 12 or older in 2013, American Indians or Alaska Natives had the highest rate of substance dependence or abuse (14.9%) compared to other racial/ethnic groups.147130 This environment affects Indian students enrolled in BIE and public schools.
A February 2010 evaluation of violence prevention policies and measures at BIE schools by DOI's Office of Inspector General (OIG) found areas of concern for potential violence and deficiencies in the policies and procedures for preventing and managing incidents.148131 According to the OIG evaluation, in recent years 6% of public high school students carried a weapon on campus, whereas 37% of BIE middle school students reported the same. The OIG evaluation found that many BIE schools had open campuses—little or no fencing, inadequate security access procedures, and flawed camera surveillance systems. The OIG recommended that the BIA and BIE
According to the BIE Assistant Deputy Director for Administration on August 6, 2010, the BIE had begun addressing the OIG's recommendations.150 Since 2010, the BIE has provided training on anger management, bullying prevention, suicide prevention, drug abuse resistance, emergency preparedness, and continuity of operations to BIE and tribal school staff. Online training is provided on the subjects of drug abuse and awareness and the H1N1 flu virus.151 Schools may use ISEP funds for safety audits, school resource officers, and school security services.
ED has indicated that American Indian/Alaska Native students enrolled in public schools are overrepresented among out-of-school suspensions and expulsions.152134 Suspensions and expulsions can have negative educational consequences. ED has released a Dear Colleague Letter to schools providing resources regarding their obligation to administer discipline without discriminating on the basis of race, color, or national origin.153
BIE school-specific issues include how to define an effective academic accountability system for BIE schools, construction and repair of BIE schools, and insufficient grant support cost funding.
The structure and administration of the BIE school system has long been considered a contributor to poor educational outcomes. A landmark 1928 report, known as the Meriam Report, found that underfunding and paternal federal policy contributed to deficient boarding school student diets, low qualification standards and salaries for teaching staff, student labor to maintain schools, and a prescriptive and unresponsive curriculum.154136 Another milestone report in 1969, known as the Kennedy report, recommended a promotion of the status of BIA within DOI but declined to make a recommendation regarding what it characterized as the long-standing and most serious issue of the ineffective internal organization of the BIA.155137 The 1969 report highlighted that education was not the BIA's highest priority and called attention to a lack of centralized authority, data, and information; a clear chain of command; educational expertise among administrators; and a high quality, motivated, and stable teaching staff. Additional organizational assessments were conducted in 1992,156138 1999,157139 and 2012.158
More recently, in140
Since 2013, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) published findings from a review of DOI management of BIE schools.has published several reports on DOI management of BIE schools. In 2017, GAO added DOI management of Indian education programs to its high-risk list of government programs.141 It found fragmented administrative structures, a lack of clear roles and poor coordination between responsible offices, frequent turnovers in leadership, and inadequate procedures and internal controls.142 In addition, GAO indicated that the small enrollment of many BIE schools makes it more difficult to acquire all of the necessary educational and personnel resources.159
Federal administration of BIE schools is complicated by statutory provisions. While the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975 (ISDEAA) and Tribally Controlled Schools Act (TCSA) support the federal policy of tribal control, DOI management of tribally operated schools is necessarily limited by the two laws. In contrast, state educational agencies (SEAs) may establish standards, processes, and programs for public schools to implement. BIE administers TCSA grants, which are limited to schools, but BIA administers ISDEAA contracts, which may include other funding streams such as funds for roads and economic development. Also, the requirement for tribal consultations supports self-determination and may improve results and acceptance, but it slows change and innovation. In addition, as a result of NCLB, BIE schools must implement 23 different state academic standards and meet other requirements for which BIE is responsible to ED.
Several options have been considered to address these long-standing administrative, organizational, and ultimately student achievement issues.
In 2014 following results of the American Indian Education Study Group, DOI ordered a restructuring of BIE in order to address many outstanding issues, in particular encouraging greater tribal control, improving student achievement, and increasing communication within the BIE and with its stakeholders. The proposed reorganization is designed to provide greater support and technical assistance to tribally operated BIE schools in order to promote more effective teachers and principals, better respond to resource needs, and foster family and community support for students. The reorganization willis also be designed to ensure the budget is aligned with expected outcomes and processes. Under the reorganization, the BIA continues administration of facilities renovation and construction projects.160
Amendments to the ESEA by the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) significantly expanded ESEA's requirements of schools receiving assistance under ESEA Title I-A. Some key provisions of the ESEA, as amended by NCLB, concern accountability of public school systems and individual public schools for improving academic outcomes of students. In 2011, the Administration announced the availability of an ESEA flexibility package for states. The package provides waivers that exempt states from various NCLB requirements related to academic accountability, teacher qualifications, and funding flexibility. Since 2007, Congress has been considering legislation that would reauthorize the ESEA and modify existing accountability requirements and the federal role in educational accountability.
BIE-funded schools are generally subject to the key provisions of the ESEA, with some specific exceptions. BIE-funded schools are not subject to the jurisdiction of SEAs but rather to that of the BIE. Many ESEA statutory and regulatory requirements may be waived by the Secretary of Education, and Indian tribes as well as SEAs and LEAs may request waivers from the Secretary.161
The following subsections describe key impacts of ESEA and the waivers on BIE schools.
The ESEA requires that state educational agencies (SEAs) implement annual assessments of students based on the state's content and performance standards for reading/language arts, mathematics, and science for multiple grades.163 The ESEA requires that states, local educational agencies (LEAs), and schools adhere to an accountability system to ensure that the state, LEAs, and schools meet annual adequate yearly progress (AYP) determinations, as measured by standards-based assessments and other academic indicators.164 Each state defines AYP for its LEAs and schools, subject to approval by the Secretary of Education.165
The ESEA requirements for BIE schools differ. The ESEA authorizes BIE schools to use assessments in accordance with those approved by the Secretary of the Interior or their accrediting agency—state, regional, or tribal.166 The Secretary of the Interior must define AYP using negotiated rulemaking, taking into account BIE schools' unique needs and circumstances, and the definition must be consistent with the NCLB; and the Secretary of the Interior may use the definition established by the state where the BIE-funded school is located.167 In either case a tribe or tribal school board may seek a waiver of all or part of the Secretary of the Interior's definition and use its own alternative AYP definition, unless the Secretary of Education determines the alternative definition does not meet NCLB requirements.168 The Secretary of the Interior, with the Secretary of Education if the former requests, must provide technical assistance to a tribe or tribal school board seeking to develop an alternative AYP definition.169
As a result of negotiated rulemaking, current regulations require that BIE schools use the same standards, assessment system, and definition of AYP of the state in which the school is located.170 The lone exception is the Miccosukee Corporation Board (Miccosukee), which received approval from ED in 2015 to implement the first phase of its alternative AYP definition.
The BIE and individual tribes and school boards would like to redefine their ESEA accountability systems. Managing accountability systems used by 23 different states and trying to compare and gauge Indian student achievement throughout the BIE system is difficult. The BIE has indicated interest in creating a unified accountability system for all BIE-funded schools consisting of a single set of academic standards, assessments, and methodology for calculation of academic performance.171
ESEA requires that a series of increasingly substantial consequences be applied to schools and LEAs that fail to meet the AYP standards for two consecutive years or more. NCLB requires states to identify schools that fail to meet AYP standards for two consecutive years for school improvement. Being designated for school improvement carries with it the requirement to develop or revise a school plan designed to result in the improvement of the school. LEAs are required to provide schools within their jurisdictions with technical assistance in the design and implementation of school improvement plans. In general, students attending a school that has been identified for improvement must be provided with public school choice—the option to attend other public schools that make AYP.
Responsibility for development of the school plan is assigned to the BIE for BIE-operated schools and to the school board for BIE-funded contract and grant schools.172 The BIE provides technical assistance to all BIE schools.173 BIE schools are not required to provide public school choice.
If a Title I-A school fails to meet AYP standards for a third year, students from low-income families must be offered the opportunity to receive instruction from a supplemental educational services (SES) provider of their choice. BIE schools are not required to provide the opportunity for SES. One or more additional "corrective actions," such as implementing a new curriculum, must be taken with respect to Title I-A schools that fail to meet AYP for a fourth year. Those that fail to meet AYP standards for a fifth year must develop a "restructuring" plan, involving such actions as reopening as a charter school. If a school fails to make AYP for a subsequent year, the school must implement its restructuring plan. Responsibility for all corrective actions and restructuring is assigned to the BIE for BIE-operated schools and to the school board for BIE-funded contract and grant schools.174
Procedures analogous to those for schools apply to LEAs that receive Title I-A grants and fail to meet AYP requirements. BIE schools, however, are not subject to the procedures for LEAs.175 For further discussion of school improvement, corrective action, and restructuring requirements under NCLB, see CRS Report R41533, Accountability Issues and Reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, by [author name scrubbed].
The BIE is required to report annually to the Secretary of Education and Congress on BIE schools identified for school improvement. The report is to include an analysis of whether sufficient resources were available to enable such schools to achieve AYP.176
Title X, Part D of NCLB amended one of the major BIE education laws, the Education Amendments of 1978 (see "Statutory Authority for BIE Elementary and Secondary Schools," above), to subject BIE-funded schools that are neither accredited nor candidates for accreditation, by certain accrediting agencies, to actions similar to the ESEA's accountability actions.177 Parallels include school plans, technical assistance, parental notification, school choice options to transfer to other BIE-funded schools or public schools (with transportation provided), staff or administrative changes, tribal option to take over BIE-operated schools, and school operation by an outside contractor.178 These sanctions must be waived, however, if the school's failure to become accredited, or to be a candidate for accreditation, is due to certain circumstances beyond the school board's control, such as a significant decline in financial resources; a natural disaster; or the poor condition of the school's facilities, vehicles, or other property.179 As of March 2011, 9% of the BIE schools were state accredited, 89% were regionally accredited, and 1% were in the process of being accredited.180
On September 23, 2011, President Obama and the Secretary of Education announced the availability of an ESEA flexibility package for states and BIE.181 The waivers exempt states from various academic accountability requirements, teacher qualification-related requirements, and funding flexibility requirements enacted through NCLB. In the place of the ESEA accountability requirements, states agree to adopt alternate accountability measures. Taken collectively, the waivers and principles included in the ESEA flexibility package amount to a fundamental redesign by the Administration of the accountability and teacher-related requirements included in current law. As of 2015, 43 States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico are approved for ESEA flexibility.182 These waivers further complicate accountability for BIE schools because BIE schools must still calculate AYP based on state accountability systems which are changing standards, assessments, and objectives. The BIE's 2012 waiver application to create a unified system of standards and accountability across all BIE-funded schools has not been approved.
During the 114th Congress, the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs approved the Reforming American Indian Standards of Education Act of 2016 (S. 2580) to create an independent Indian education agency that would be within DOI and that would be directed by a presidential appointee. The 115th Congress instructed DOI to reorganize and present a reorganization plan for Indian affairs such that all Indian education functions are administered by and accountable to the BIE.146 The ESEA, as amended by ESSA, requires DOI to develop regulations for defining BIE school standards, assessments, and an accountability system under ESEA Title I-A, and it permits BIE schools to waive such regulatory requirements if the tribal governing body or school board of a BIE school determines the regulations to be inappropriate. Should such a determination be made, the tribal governing body or school board must submit a proposal to the Secretary of the Interior that includes alternate standards, assessments, and an accountability system, if applicable, that are consistent with the requirements of ESEA Section 1111 and take into account the unique circumstances of the school. The BIE announced and initiated the Accountability Negotiated Rulemaking Committee in January 2017.147 The final regulations are expected to be in place for AY2017-2018. The Miccosukee Tribe and Navajo Nation had alternative standards, assessments, and accountability plans approved by DOI and ED—the Miccosukee Tribe for AY2014-2015, AY2015-2016, and AY2016-2017, and the Navajo Nation for AY2015-2016 and AY 2016-2017. The ability of the Miccosukee Tribe and Navajo Nation to continue using the alternative systems in AY2017-2018 and beyond will likely depend on the waiver requirements established under negotiated rulemaking. For at least 20 years, BIE school facilities have been characterized by a very large number of old facilities with a high rate of deficiencies.148 Some facilities are in poor condition and do not meet health and safety standards.149 Reports from students and faculty suggest that conditions affect learning and enrollment. GAO and DOI have reported several weaknesses in the management of BIE school facilities.150 The weaknesses include a lack of consistent and complete facilities condition information, inadequate implementation of procedures to address facilities' deficiencies, insufficient staffing, inadequate staff training, inconsistent oversight, insufficient internal controls and procedures, and poor communication.For at least 20 years, BIE school facilities have been characterized by a very large number of old facilities with a high rate of deficiencies.183 Some facilities are in poor condition and do not meet health and safety standards.184 Reports from students and faculty suggest that conditions affect learning and enrollment. designed to ensure the budget is aligned with expected outcomes and processes.145
2015, the BIA determined that 42 schools were in poor condition and estimated a deferred maintenance backlog of $377 million.185 On December 31, 2009, the 2016, DOI estimated that the replacement cost of BIE school facilities exceeded $4.6 billion and that the cost to correct known deficiencies exceeded $430 million.151 On December 31, 2009, the latest estimate available, the BIA estimated that the costs to replace, repair, construct, and improve existing facilities in poor condition, excluding facilities in fair or good condition, would be $1.3 billion.186152
In 2011, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reached a settlement with the BIA and BIE to address alleged violations of waste, water, air, toxics, and community right-to-know laws at schools and public water systems. The alleged violations are related to the labeling, storage, and release of wastes; asbestos management plans; and drinking water monitoring and contaminant levels. The original settlement required BIA and BIE to correct alleged violations at 72 schools and 27 water systems and implement an environmental compliance auditing program and an environmental management system (EMS) to improve environmental practices at all of its BIE schools. The consent agreement was modified in 2014, expanding the list of BIA/BIE facilities subject to the consent agreement.187
In response to ongoing facilities needs and unsafe conditions, Congress has established requirements of DOI in an effort to facilitate addressing the issues. NCLBThe No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB, P.L. 107-110) required that DOI establish a negotiated rulemaking committee to report on BIE schools' needs for school and school facilities replacement and repair, and to develop formulas to distribute funds to address these needs.188154 In 2012, the BIA published its catalog of facilities, formulas for renovation and repair, and recommendations for addressing school facilities needs.189
Congress has periodically directed the BIA to develop replacement school priority lists. The latestprevious replacement school construction priority list of 14 schools was published in 2004.190,156 The FY2015FY2016 appropriations act funded design costs forreplacement of the last two schools on the 2004 list and directed the BIE to develop a new list to inform the FY2016 appropriations level. In 2014.157 In 2016, the BIA began a process for reassessing and reprioritizing school replacement and renovation needs.
In addition to annual appropriations, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (P.L. 111-5) authorized Qualified School Construction Bonds (QSCBs; 26 U.S.C. §54F). QSCBs are a tax credit bond program that make bond proceeds available for the construction, rehabilitation, or repair of a public school facility or for the acquisition of land for a public school facility. Treasury allocated $200 million in each of 2009 and 2010 to DOI for Indian tribal governments to construct or repair BIE-funded schools. As of May 2014, no tribe had taken advantage of the program partly because many tribes are unable to sell bonds because they are high risk entities; although the allocation remains available.191
Prior to FY2015, appropriations for the administrative costs associated with tribes administering federal programs previously administered by federal agencies have not covered estimated costs. Appropriations for tribal grant support costs have covered approximately two-thirds of such costs as calculated by the BIE. For more information on tribal grant support costs, see the earlier section entitled "Tribal Grant Support Costs (Administrative Cost Grants)." Appropriations for contract support costs for tribes and tribal organizations administering ISDEAA contracts also resulted in a shortfall. This discrepancy has discouraged some tribes and tribal organizations from operating BIE schools.
In June 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that when Congress appropriates contract support costs on a lump sum basis, tribes are entitled to receive the full amount of reasonable and allowable federal funds for their contract support costs. The Supreme Court pointed out that Congress has several options: it could amend ISDEAA to relieve the DOI of the obligation to enter contracts with all qualifying tribes or the obligation to pay full contract support costs; it could appropriate contract support costs on a contractor-by-contractor basis; or it could appropriate enough funds to cover the aggregate amount of contract support costs of all tribes.192 As a result, the FY2015 appropriations fully funded contract support costs.
Fully funding contract support costs has increased pressure on Congress to fully fund grant support costs. In addition, increasing tribal control of BIE schools is one of the Administration's policy goals.
Indian education issues affecting public schools include the JOM freeze and the participation of Indian parents and tribes.
There are a several potential options for addressing poor facilities at BIE schools. Some that are routinely suggested or have been suggested by organizations like GAO include the following:
Indian education issues affecting public schools include the JOM freeze and the participation of Indian parents and tribes.
Johnson O'Malley Program FreezeBy statute, JOM funds are distributed to contractors by formula, based on a count of Indian students and average per-pupil operating costs. Student counts for allocating funds have been effectively frozen since FY1995. The House and Senate reports, accompanying the DOI and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1995 (P.L. 103-332), instructed the BIA to transfer JOM allocations to tribal priority allocations (TPA) along with certain funds for housing improvement in an effort to stabilize funding for tribes and provide them additional control and flexibility in the use of the funds.163 The intention was to include the JOM funds in each tribe's recurring base funding. Based on public comment and the appropriations reports, the BIA decided to use the FY1995 JOM allocations based on the FY1995 student counts to establish JOM base funding for each of the tribal contractors, excluding tribal organizations.164 There is a statutory prohibition on changing a tribe's base funding.165 This transfer to TPA has resulted in what is commonly referred to as the JOM freeze. In FY2005, JOM served about 272,000 students in 33 states.166 At the direction of Congress, the BIE is attempting to count the current number of students served.
As a result of the 1995 freeze, the BIE no longer systematically collects data about the numbers of students served by projects, the needs of those students, the services provided, or the outcomes realized. The freeze allows pre-1995 contractors to receive funding based on their 1995 student count regardless of the number of students actually served. The freeze included each tribe's 1995 JOM allocation into its base funding or tribal priority allocation (TPA). TPA allows tribes flexibility in the management and use of funds for various programs and services. Tribes that receive JOM funding through TPAas part of their base funding are dependent on this as a fairly stable source of funding. Appropriations conference reports since FY2012 have directed the BIE, in coordination with the Department of Education, to count the number of students eligible for (participating in) the Johnson O'Malley (JOM) program and recommend a methodology to distribute funds in the future.167 As of May 2017 As of December 2014, the BIE was still trying to collect an accurate and complete count.
The participation and influence of Indian parents and tribes in the education of Indian students has increased over time. The JOM, Impact Aid, and Indian Education formula grant programs require consultation with an Indian parent committee. Passage of ISDEAA has enabled tribes to operateESEA, as amended by ESSA, requires that LEAs with substantial AI/AN or Indian student enrollment consult with Indian tribes and tribal organizations prior to submitting their applications for several ESEA formula grant programs. Since FY2012, through the ESEA Indian Education Programs, ED has awarded several demonstration grants to partnerships between tribes or tribal education departments (TEDs) and states, LEAs, or BIE schools.
BIE schools. There is continued interest in increasing the role of Indian tribes in an effort to increase student achievement and cultural relevance of education. Increasing the role of tribes in public schools may confront sovereignty, accountability, collective bargaining, and property ownership issues and will impact non-Indian students in public schools. For instance, the Tribal Education Departments National Assembly, Co. has proposed allowing tribal education departments (TEDs) to operate public schools, particularly public schools on or near reservations and public schools with large enrollments of tribal children.193 The recent STEP and Native Youth Community Projects (see earlier descriptions) are168 Programs funded under ESEA Title VI might be viewed as incremental efforts to increase cultural relevance and tribal influence.
Author Contact Information
Acknowledgments
This is a substantially revised version of a report originally written by [author name scrubbed]Roger Walke, former Specialist in American Indian Policy.
1. |
In this report, the term "Indian" means American Indians and Alaska Natives (the latter term includes |
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2. |
The BIE was formerly the Office of Indian Education Programs (OIEP) in the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA). In 2006, the Secretary of the Interior moved the OIEP out of the BIA and made it an agency equivalent to the BIA, renaming it the BIE. Both bureaus are under the Assistant Secretary |
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3. |
The list of federally recognized tribal entities is published annually in the Federal Register. The most recent list is U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, "Indian Entities Recognized and Eligible To Receive Services From the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs," |
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4. |
Decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court have characterized the role of the federal government with respect to Indian tribes as involving a trust relationship. Having identified the trust relationship, the Court has upheld congressional power to provide special treatment for Indians, declaring that "[a]s long as the special treatment can be tied rationally to the fulfillment of Congress' unique obligation toward the Indians, such legislative judgments will not be disturbed" (Morton v. Mancari, 417 U.S. 535, 555 (1974)). However, the Court has never interpreted the trust relationship to require any definite action on the part of Congress. When called upon to decide whether an administrative agency has breached its trust obligation or when called upon to enforce the trust obligation against an agency of the Executive Branch, moreover, the Court confines its review to whether the agency has a trust obligation imposed upon it by statute. See, for example, United States v. Mitchell, 463 U.S. 206 (1983). |
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5. |
Worthington Chauncey Ford, ed., Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774-1789, Vol. II, 1775, May 10-September 20 (Washington: GPO, 1905), pp. 176-177. Congress's stated intent was to keep the students from returning to their homes in British Canada. |
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6. |
Francis Paul Prucha, The Great Father: The United States Government and the American Indians (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1984), pp. 135-136. |
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7. |
Treaty with the Oneida, Etc., Art. III, December 2, 1794, 7 Stat. 47, 48. The United States agreed not only to construct gristmills and sawmills for the Oneida, Tuscarora, and Stockbridge tribes but also to send persons to instruct the tribes in their use. See also Alice C. Fletcher, Indian Education and Civilization, U.S. Bureau of Education Special Report, Sen. Ex. Doc. 95, 48th Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1888), p. 162. |
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8. |
Treaty with the Kaskaskia, Art. 3d, August 13, 1803, 7 Stat. 78, 79. |
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9. |
Nell Jessup Newton, ed.-in-chief, Cohen's Handbook of Federal Indian Law 2005 Edition (Newark, NJ: LexisNexis Matthew Bender, 2005), p. 1356. Congress ended treaty-making with Indian tribes in 1871. |
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10. |
§9, Act of March 1, 1793, Chap. 19, 2nd Cong., 2nd sess., 1 Stat. 329, 331. As civilizing factors, the section specifically authorizes domestic animals, farming equipment, goods, money, and resident agents, but not teachers or schools. |
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11. |
Act of March 3, 1819, Chap. 85, 15th Cong., 2nd sess., 3 Stat. 516. Previous appropriations for Indian affairs would have funded education only for children of tribes that signed treaties providing for education. |
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12. |
Fletcher, Indian Education and Civilization, p. 197. |
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13. |
Szasz, Margaret Connell, and Ryan, Carmelita, "American Indian Education," in Wilcomb E. Washburn, vol. ed., Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 4, Indian-White Relations (Washington: Smithsonian, 1988), p. 290. |
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14. |
The Board of Commissioners was created by the April 10, 1869, act (16 Stat. 40). |
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15. |
Fletcher, Indian Education and Civilization, p. 167. |
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16. |
An Act Making Appropriations for the Current and Contingent Expenses of the Indian Department ..., Act of July 15, 1870, Chap. 296, 41st Cong., 2nd sess., 16 Stat. 335, 359. See also U.S. American Indian Policy Review Commission, Task Force Five: Indian Education, Report on Indian Education, Committee Print (Washington: GPO, 1976), p. 69. |
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17. |
Paul Stuart, Nations Within a Nation: Historical Statistics of American Indians (New York: Greenwood Press, 1987), pp. 135, 165. |
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18. |
Founded by Army Captain Richard H. Pratt on an unused Army base in Carlisle, PA, the school's model of educating Indian students in an off-reservation manual labor boarding school, away from students' families and cultures, became well-known. Pratt, its first superintendent, publicized the school and its emphasis on assimilation. Carlisle was funded through Indian appropriations bills and private donations. It closed in 1918. See Szasz and Ryan, "American Indian Education," pp. 290-291. |
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19. |
Prucha, Great Father, pp. 815-816. |
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20. |
Szasz and Ryan, "American Indian Education," pp. 290-294. |
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21. |
Edward E. Hill, comp., Guide to Records in the National Archives of the United States Relating to American Indians (Washington: National Archives and Records Service, 1981), p. 24. See also Szasz and Ryan, "American Indian Education," pp. 290, 293. |
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22. |
Hill, Guide to Records, p. 112; and Szasz and Ryan, "American Indian Education," p. 297. Authorization for Alaska Native education was in §13, Act of May 17, 1884, Chap.53, 48th Cong. 1st sess., 23 Stat. 24, 27-28. |
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23. |
After 1870, most tribal schools were in Oklahoma, operated by one of the "Five Civilized Tribes" (Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, and Seminole), as they were then called. |
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24. |
Szasz and Ryan, "American Indian Education," p. 291. |
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25. |
U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Indian Affairs, Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs [Fiscal Year 1890-1891] (Washington: GPO, 1891), p. 71. |
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26. |
Prucha, Great Father, pp. 823-825. |
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27. |
Prucha, Great Father, pp. 824-825. |
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28. |
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Report on BIA Education: Excellence in Indian Education Through the Effective Schools Process. Final Review Draft (Washington: The Department, 1988), Table 1, p. 15. |
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29. |
Marlita A. Reddy, ed., Statistical Record of Native North Americans (Detroit: Gale Research, 1993), p. 141. The percentages are of Indians aged 5 to 20 and are based on Census data. Szasz and Ryan state, "In 1928 almost 90 percent of all Indian children were enrolled in some school" ("American Indian Education," p. 294). The discrepancy in percentages may be related to differing age ranges and differing definitions of the Indian population. |
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30. |
Act of November 2, 1921, 42 Stat. 208, as amended; 25 U.S.C. §13. |
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31. |
P.L. 73-167, Act of April 16, 1934, 48 Stat. 596, as amended; 25 U.S.C. §452-457. |
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32. |
Szasz and Ryan, "American Indian Education," p. 295. |
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33. |
Szasz and Ryan, "American Indian Education," pp. 294-295; Prucha, Great Father, pp. 836-839, 977-983; and Margaret Connell Szasz, "W. Carson Ryan: From the Meriam Report to the Indian New Deal," in Education and the American Indian: The Road to Self-Determination Since 1928, 2nd ed. (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1977), pp. 16-36. The Meriam Report was an influential study of federal Indian affairs undertaken by the Institute for Government Research (Lewis A. Meriam, ed., The Problem of Indian Administration (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1928)). |
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34. |
Szasz and Ryan, "American Indian Education," p. 297. |
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35. |
P.L. 81-874, Act of September 30, 1950, 64 Stat. 1100, as amended; currently codified as Title |
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36. |
P.L. 83-248, Act of August 8, 1953, 67 Stat. 530. |
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37. |
Larry LaCounte, Tribal Perspective of the Impact Aid Program (Washington: National Indian Policy Center, 1993), pp. 3-5. |
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38. |
P.L. 89-10, Act of April 11, 1965, 79 Stat. 27, as amended. |
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39. |
§102, Elementary and Secondary Education Amendments of 1966, P.L. 89-750, Act of Nov 3, 1966, 80 Stat 1191. |
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40. |
U.S. Congress, Senate Labor and Public Welfare Committee, Special Subcommittee on Indian Education, Indian Education: A National Tragedy, A National Challenge (Washington: GPO, 1969). |
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41. |
Title IV of the Education Amendments Act of 1972, P.L. 92-318, Act of June 23, 1972, 86 Stat. 235, 334, as amended; currently codified as ESEA Title |
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42. |
The OIE was transferred to the new Department of Education in 1980. |
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43. |
Prucha, Great Father, p. 1102. |
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44. |
P.L. 93-638, Act of January 4, 1975, 88 Stat. 2203, as amended; 25 U.S.C. §450 et seq. |
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45. |
P.L. 95-561, Title XI, Part B, Act of November 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 2143, 2316, as amended; currently codified at 25 U.S.C., Chap. 22. The quote is from §1130 of the original act (now §1131 of the amended act). |
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46. |
Prucha, Great Father, p. 1146. |
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47. |
P.L. 100-297, Title V, Act of April 28, 1988, 102 Stat. 130, 385, as amended; 25 U.S.C., Chap. 27. |
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48. |
Provisions are currently codified at 25 U.S.C. §2007 and 25 U.S.C. §2503. |
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49. |
§421(a) of the 1972 act; currently codified at ESEA § |
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50. |
P.L. 92-318, §411(a),(c)(2), 86 Stat. 334-339; currently codified, as amended, at ESEA § |
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51. |
25 U.S.C. §456. |
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52. |
U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations for 1994, hearings, part 8, 103rd Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1993), p. 168. |
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53. |
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Report on BIA Education: Excellence in Indian Education Through the Effective Schools Process. Final Review Draft (Washington: The Department, 1988), p. 17. |
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54. |
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Branch of Education, Fiscal Year 1965 Statistics Concerning Indian Education (Haskell, Kansas: Haskell Institute Publications Service, 1966), p. 15. |
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55. |
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Office of Indian Education Programs, Fiscal Year 1995 Annual Education Report (Washington: The Bureau, no date), p. vi. |
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56. |
U.S. Department of the Interior, Indian Affairs, Budget Justifications Fiscal Year 201 |
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57. |
The limitations are in the annual BIA appropriations acts. |
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58. |
|
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59. |
U.S. Department of the Interior, Indian Affairs, Budget Justifications Fiscal Year 2008, pp. IA-EDUC-5 to -6 |
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60. |
25 U.S.C. §2007(f). "One-fourth degree" is the equivalent of one "full-blood" grandparent out of four. In certain circumstances, non-Indian students may attend BIE schools. |
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61. |
25 C.F.R. 273.12. |
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62. |
P.L. 103-382, Act of October 20, 1994, 108 Stat. 3518. |
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63. |
ESEA §7151(3). |
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64. |
25 U.S.C. §7703(a)(1). |
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65. |
NAEP is often known as "the nation's report card." |
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66. |
BIE also funds post-secondary institutions and programs not discussed in this report. A small number of BIE-funded elementary-secondary schools also receive funding as public schools from their states. |
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67. |
FY2013 Budget, p. IA-BIE-40. |
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68. |
Sally Jewel, Secretary of the Interior to Restructuring the Bureau of Indian Education, Order No. 3334, June 12, 2014. |
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69. |
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Education, National Directory, updated |
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70. |
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71.
|
|
Lawrence O. Picus, Allan Odden, and Michael Goetz, et al., An Independent Review of Maine's Essential Programs and Services Funding Act: Part 1, Lawrence O. Picus and Associates, Presented to the Maine Legislature's Joint Standing Committee on Education and Cultural Affairs, North Hollywood, CA, April 1, 2013. |
The schools are Blackwater Community School in Coolidge, AZ; Kin Dah Lichi'i Olta' (Kinlichee) in Ganado, AZ; Little Singer Community School in Winslow, AZ; Nazlini Community School in Ganado, AZ; Seba Dalkai Boarding School in Winslow, AZ; Shonto Preparatory School in Shonto, AZ; Hannahville Indian School in Wilson, MI; and Joseph K. Lumsden Bahweting Anishnabe Academy in Sault Ste. Marie, MI. |
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FY201 |
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U.S. Congress, Senate Appropriations Committee, Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, 1995, report to accompany H.R. 4602, 103rd Cong., 2nd sess., S.Rept. 103-294 (Washington: GPO, 1994), p. 58. |
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The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2012 (P.L. 112-74). |
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75. |
P.L. 113-76 and P.L. 113-235. |
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76. |
U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies, American Indian and Alaska Native Public and Outside Witness Hearing |
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77. |
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78.
|
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FY2017 Budget. |
Percentage calculated by CRS based on FY201 |
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Annual appropriation acts for the Department of the Interior regularly include an administrative provision prohibiting BIA expenditures to support operation of schools in Alaska (except through the Johnson-O'Malley program); see, for example, P.L. 110-161 (121 Stat. 2113).
81 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
80. |
FY2016 Budget, p. IA-BIE-6– IA-BIE-9. |
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81. |
U.S. Department of Education, ED Data Express, downloaded by CRS on July 14, 2015. |
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82. |
For more information on ESEA flexibility, see CRS Report R42328, Educational Accountability and Secretarial Waiver Authority Under Section 9401 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]. |
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The NAEP, directed by the U.S. Department of Education, is the largest nationally representative and continuing assessment of what America's students know and can do in various subject areas. Since NAEP assessments are administered uniformly across the nation, NAEP results serve as a common metric. |
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G. Kena, |
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87. |
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Ibid. |
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|
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|
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Act of November 2, 1921, 42 Stat. 208, as amended; 25 U.S.C. §13. |
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P.L. 93-638, act of January 4, 1975, 88 Stat. 2203, as amended; 25 U.S.C. § |
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|
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|
93.
Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Education, National Directory, updated February 2017. |
P.L. 95-561, Title XI, Part B, Act of November 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 2143, 2316, as amended by §1042 of the Native American Education Improvement Act of 2001, which was Title X, Part D, of the No Child Left Behind Act, P.L. 107-110, Act of January 8, 2002, 115 Stat. 2007, as further amended; 25 U.S.C., Chap. 22 (25 U.S.C. §2000 et seq.). |
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P.L. 100-297, Title V, Act of April 28, 1988, 102 Stat. 130, 385, as amended; 25 U.S.C., Chap. 27. |
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Cohen's Handbook of Federal Indian Law 2005 Edition, p. 1361. |
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97. |
Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Education, National Directory, updated June 2011. |
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Federal fiscal years (FY) begin on October 1 and end on the following September 30. School years (SY) begin on July 1 (three-quarters of the way through the fiscal year) and end the following June 30. Hence, BIE appropriations for FY2012 (October 1, 2011-September 30, 2012) will be used to fund SY2012-2013 (July 1, 2012-September 30, 2013). |
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25 U.S.C. §2007. |
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100. | 25 C.F.R. Part 39, Subparts A-C. | |||||||||||||||||||||
101. | 25 C.F.R. Part 39, Subparts A-C. |
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25 C.F.R. Part 39, Subpart G. |
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25 U.S.C. §2019. |
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Vicki Yarnell, Theodora Lambson, and Judy Pfannenstiel, BIE Family and Child Education Program: 2013 Report, Research & Training Associates, Inc., Report Prepared for: U.S. Department of the Interior, May 2014, p. 12. |
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|
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25 U.S.C. §2008. |
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107. |
FY2013 Budget, pp. IA-BIE-24, and 25 C.F.R. Part 39, Subpart J. |
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U.S. Department of the Interior, Indian Affairs, Budget Justifications Fiscal Year 2011. p. IA-EDU-21. |
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25 U.S.C. §2020.P.L. 95-561, as added byP.L. 107-110. |
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25 U.S.C. §452. |
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25 C.F.R. 273.12. |
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FY2013 Budget, p. IA-BIE-31. |
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25 C.F.R. Part 273.13. |
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| ||||||||||||||||||||||
115. |
39 Fed.Reg. 30114-30116 (August 21, 1974). See also Prucha, Great Father, pp. 1143-1144. |
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116. |
P.L. 99-190, §101(d) (Title I), Act of December 19, 1985, 99 Stat. 1185, 1235. |
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117. |
U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, 1995, Report to accompany H.R. 4602, 103rd Cong., 2nd sess., June 17, 1994, H.Rept. 103-551, pp. 54-55 and U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Appropriations, Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, 1995, Report to accompany H.R. 4602, 103rd Cong., 2nd sess., June 28, 1994, S.Rept. 103-294, p. 55. |
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118. |
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, "Tribal Consultation of Indian Education Topics," 60 Federal Register 53932, October 18, 1995. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
119. |
25 U.S.C §450j-1(b)(2). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
120. |
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Budget Justifications and Performance Information, Fiscal Year 2005 (Washington: The Department, 2004), p. BIA-58. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
121. |
Totals for the BIE elementary-secondary education program were calculated by CRS. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
122. |
ESEA, §9101(26(C). |
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123. |
IDEA, §602(19)(C). |
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124. | Totals for the BIE elementary-secondary education program were calculated by CRS. ESEA, §8101(30)(C). IDEA, §602(19)(C). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
125. |
For more information on the ED program, see CRS Report RL31882, Teacher Quality Enhancement Grants (Title II, Part A of the Higher Education Act): Overview and Reauthorization Issues. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
126. |
For more information on the ED program, see CRS Report RL31240, 21st Century Community Learning Centers: Background and Funding. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
127. |
The inflation index has been either as specified in section 619(d)(2)(B) of the IDEA or the percent change in the IDEA appropriations from the prior year. |
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ESEA, § |
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Trust lands and restricted lands are not taxable by states or local governments, including LEAs. Trust lands are lands held by the federal government in trust for an Indian tribe or individual; restricted lands are lands held by an Indian tribe or individual subject to federal restrictions on alienation. |
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P.L. 92-203, Act of December 18, 1971, 85 Stat. 688; 43 U.S.C. §1601 et seq. |
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131. |
ESEA §8013(5), (7). |
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U.S. Department of Education, Fiscal Year |
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|
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|
122BIE schools may not carry out secondary-level CTE programs with NACTEP funds, because they are eligible to receive money through the states. |
ESEA, §§7111-7152. |
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135. |
U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Military Construction and Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2012, Conference Report to Accompany H.R. 2055, 112th Cong., 1st sess., December 15, 2011, H.Rept. 112-331 (Washington: GPO, 2011), p. 1149. |
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136. |
ESEA, §§7301-7306. |
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For FY2013, the Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA,P.L. 112-25) called for sequestration of both mandatory and discretionary spending. In general, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) estimated that the joint committee sequester would require a 5.0% reduction in non-exempt nondefense discretionary funding. These reductions were later applied to full-year FY2013 funding levels following the enactment of full-year funding in the Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2013 (P.L. 113-6). |
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| ||||||||||||||||||||||
139. |
ESEA §7101. |
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140. |
25 U.S.C. §450(b)(2). |
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124.
|
|
ESEA §6101. 125.
|
|
25 U.S.C. §5301(b)(2). |
Robert E Slavin and Alan Cheung, "A Synthesis of Research on Language of Reading Instruction for English Language Learners," Review of Educational Research, vol. 75, no. 2 (Summer 2005), pp. 247-284. |
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|
Mary Eunice Romero-Little, Teresa L. McCarty, and Larisa Warhol, et al., "Language Policies in Practice: Preliminary Findings from a Large-Scale National Study ofNative American Language Shift," TESOL Quarterly, vol. 41, no. 3 (September 2007), pp. 607-618. 128.
|
|
Teresa L. McCarty, Ph.D. and Alica Wiley Snell, The Role of Native Languages and Cultures in American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian Student Achievement, Arizona State University, under a contract from the U.S. Department of Education, July 2011. |
Teresa L. McCarty, Ph.D. and Alica Wiley Snell, The Role of Native Languages and Cultures in American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian Student Achievement, Arizona State University, under a contract from the U.S. Department of Education, July 2011. |
||||||||||||||||||
143. |
National Indian Education Association, Priorities for Improving the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) for Native American Students, Washington, DC, 2010. |
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144. |
For more information on the Blueprint, see CRS Report R41355, Administration's Proposal to Reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act: Comparison to Current Law, by [author name scrubbed] et al. |
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145. |
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, Administration for Native Americans, Native American Language Preservation and Maintenance , HHS-2011-ACF-ANA-NL-0139, February 25, 2011, http://www.acf.hhs.gov/grants/open/foa/view/HHS-2011-ACF-ANA-NL-0139. |
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Brian Drapeaux, Director, Bureau of Indian Education, Lillian Sparks, Commissioner, Administration for Native Americans, and William Mendoza, Executive Director, White House Initiative on American Indian and Alaska Native Education, Memorandum of Agreement between the U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the U.S. Department of Education On Native Languages, November 30, 2012. |
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Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Results from the 2013 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: Summary of National Findings, NSDUH Series H-48, HHS Publication No. (SMA) 14-4863. Rockville, MD: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 2014. |
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U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Inspector General, Evaluation Report—School Violence Prevention, Report No. NM-EV-BIE-0003-2008, Washington, DC, February 2010. |
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The evaluation indicated that reporting of incidents in the Native American Student Information System (NASIS) is inconsistent and inaccurate. |
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150. |
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Education, Statement of David Talayumptewa, Assistant Deputy Director for Administration, Before the House Committee on Natural Resources Field Hearing on Indian Education, August 6, 2010, http://naturalresources.house.gov/UploadedFiles/TalayumptewaTestimony08.06.10.pdf. |
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151. |
Bureau of Indian Education, "Safe Schools Online Training Courses," http://www.bie.edu/idc/groups/xbie/documents/text/idc010830.pdf, retrieved May 18, 2011. |
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|
134.
Kimberly Elmore, Management Advisory - Summary of Bureau of Indian Education Violence Prevention Inspections, Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of the Interior, Report No. 2015-CR-074, June 15, 2016. |
U.S. Department of Education, Office for Civil Rights, Protecting Civil Rights, Advancing Equity: Report to the President and Secretary of Education, Under Section 203(b)(1) of the Department of Education Organization Act, FY 13–14, Washington, DC, 2015. |
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U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division and U.S. Department of Education, Office for Civil Rights, "Nondiscriminatory Administration of School Discipline," Dear Colleague Letter, January 8, 2014. |
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Lewis Meriam, The Problem of Indian Administration, Institute for Government Research, Report of a Survey made at the request of Honorable Hubert Work, Secretary of the Interior, and submitted to him, Baltimore, MD, February 21, 1928. |
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U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, Special Subcommittee on Indian Education, Indian Education: A National Tragedy - A National Challenge, Pursuant to S. Res. 80, 91st Cong., 1st sess., November 3, 1969, S.Rept. 91-501 (Washington: GPO, 1969). |
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Joint Tribal/BIA/DOI Advisory Task Force on Bureau of Indian Affairs Reorganization, 1992 Report to the Secretary of the Interior and the Appropriations Committees, December 1992. |
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National Academy of Public Administration, A Study of Management and Administration: The Bureau of Indian Affairs, August 1999. |
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Bronner, Final Report: Examination, Evaluation, and Recommendations for Support Functions, March 2012. |
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|
142.
U.S. Government Accountability Office, High-Risk Series: Progress on Many High-Risk Areas, While Substantial Efforts Needed on Others, GAO-17-407T, February 15, 2017. |
U.S. Government Accountability Office, Indian Affairs: Management Challenges Continue to Hinder Efforts to Improve Indian Education, GAO-13-342T, February 27, 2013; and U.S. Government Accountability Office, Indian Affairs: Better Management and Accountability Needed to Improve Indian Education, GAO-13-774, September 24, 2013 | ||||||||||||||||||||
160. |
|
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ESEA §9401. For discussion of waivers in the NCLB, see CRS Report RL31583, K-12 Education: Special Forms of Flexibility in the Administration of Federal Aid Programs, by [author name scrubbed]. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
162. |
For further discussion of AYP under NCLB, see CRS Report RL32495, Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP): Implementation of the No Child Left Behind Act, by [author name scrubbed]. |
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163. |
ESEA §§1111(b)(3) and 1116(a)(1)(A). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
164. |
ESEA §1111(b)(2). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
165. |
ESEA §1111(b)(2)(C). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
166. |
ESEA §1111(m). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
167. |
ESEA §1116(g)(1). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
168. |
ESEA §1116(g)(1)(B). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
169. |
ESEA. §1116(g)(1)(C). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
170. |
25 C.F.R. §30.104. |
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171. |
Bureau of Indian Education, ESEA Flexibility Request for Window 3, June 7, 2012. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
172. |
ESEA §1116(g)(3)-(4). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
173. |
ESEA §1116(g)(3). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
174. |
ESEA §1116(g)(3)-(4). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
175. |
ESEA §1116(b-c) and §1116(g)(2). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
176. |
ESEA §1116(g)(5). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
177. |
Native American Education Improvement Act of 2001, P.L. 107-110, Title X, Part D, §1042, Act of January 8, 2002, 115 Stat. 1439, 2007, as amended; 25 U.S.C., Chap. 22, §§2000 et seq. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
178. |
25 U.S.C. §2001(b)(3), (7)-(8). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
179. |
25 U.S.C. §2001(b)(8)(B). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
180. |
E-mail from the Bureau of Indian Education, Special Assistant to the Director, March 29, 2011. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
181. |
For more information on these waivers, see CRS Report R42328, Educational Accountability and Secretarial Waiver Authority Under Section 9401 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
182. |
U.S. Department of Education, "ESEA Flexibility," downloaded on July 16, 2015, from http://www2.ed.gov/policy/elsec/guid/esea-flexibility/index.html. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
183. |
U.S. General Accounting Office, School Facilities: Reported Condition and Costs to Repair Schools Funded by Bureau of Indian Affairs, GAO/HEHA-98-47, December 31, 1997. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
184. |
U.S. Government Accountability Office, Indian Affairs: Preliminary Results Show Continued Challenges to the Oversight and Support of Education Facilities, GAO-15-389T, February 27, 2015. |
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144.
|
|
U.S. Government Accountability Office, Bureau of Indian Education Needs to Improve Oversight of School Spending, GAO-15-121, November 13, 2014; and U.S. Government Accountability Office, Further Actions on GAO Recommendations Needed to Address Systemic Management Challenges with Indian Education, GAO-15-539T, April 22, 2015. 145.
|
|
Secretary's Order 3334, "Restructuring the Bureau of Indian Education," Sally Jewell, Secretary of the Interior, June 12, 2014. 146.
|
|
U.S. Congress, House Committee on Rules, Explanatory Statement, To accompany House Amendment to Senate Amendments to H.R. 244 (Rules Committee Print 115-16, showing the text of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017.), 115th Cong., 1st sess. 147.
|
|
Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, "Proposed Membership of the Bureau of Indian Education Accountability Negotiated Rulemaking Committee," 82 Federal Register 5473-5476, January 18, 2017. 148.
|
|
U.S. General Accounting Office, School Facilities: Reported Condition and Costs to Repair Schools Funded by Bureau of Indian Affairs, GAO/HEHA-98-47, December 31, 1997. 149.
|
|
U.S. Government Accountability Office, Indian Affairs: Preliminary Results Show Continued Challenges to the Oversight and Support of Education Facilities, GAO-15-389T, February 27, 2015. 150.
|
|
U.S. Government Accountability Office, Indian Affairs: Preliminary Results Show Continued Challenges to the Oversight and Support of Education Facilities, GAO-15-389T, February 27, 2015; U.S. Government Accountability Office, High-Risk Series: Progress on Many High-Risk Areas, While Substantial Efforts Needed on Others, GAO-17-407T, February 15, 2017; U.S. Government Accountability Office, Indian Affairs: Key Actions Needed to Ensure Satety and Health at Indian School Faciltities, GAO-16-391T, March 16, 2016; and U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Inspector General, Condition of Indian School Facilities, Report No.: C-EV-BIE-0023-2014, September 2016. 151.
|
U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Inspector General, Condition of Indian School Facilities, Report No.: C-EV-BIE-0023-2014, September 2016 |
|
||||||
"Indian Affairs Funded Schools in Poor Condition as Indicated by Facility Condition Index (FCI)," provided by the BIA to CRS in February 2010. |
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United States Environmental Protection Agency, "Consent Agreement with the US Department of Interior (DOI), Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) and Bureau of Indian Education (BIE) |
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25 U.S.C. §2005(a)(5). |
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Report of the No Child Left Behind School Facilities and Construction Negotiated Rulemaking Committee, Broken Promises, Broken Schools, December 2011. |
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U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, "Replacement School Construction Priority List as of FY 2004," 69 Federal Register 13870, March 24, 2004. |
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191. |
Letter from Jon Tester, United States Senate, Tim Johnson, United States Senate, and Al Franken, United States Senate, to Honorable Sally Jewel, Secretary, U.S. Department of the Interior, May 19, 2014. |
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192. |
Salazar v. Ramah Navajo Chapter, No. 11-551 (U.S. Supreme Court June 18, 2012). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
FY2017 Budget. 158.
|
|
Office of the Assistant Secretary—Indian Affairs, Interior, "Office of the Assistant Secretary—Indian Affairs; School Facilities Construction List," 81 Federal Register 25704, April 29, 2016. 159.
|
|
Letter from Jon Tester, United States Senate, Tim Johnson, United States Senate, and Al Franken, United States Senate, to Honorable Sally Jewel, Secretary, U.S. Department of the Interior, May 19, 2014. 160.
|
|
For example, see U.S. Congress, House Committee on Rules, Explanatory Statement, To accompany House Amendment to Senate Amendments to H.R. 244 (Rules Committee Print 115-16, showing the text of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017.), 115th Cong., 1st sess, p. 30. 161.
|
|
U.S. Government Accountability Office, High-Risk Series: Progress on Many High-Risk Areas, While Substantial Efforts Needed on Others, GAO-17-407T, February 15, 2017. 162.
|
|
U.S. Government Accountability Office, Indian Affairs: Management Challenges Continue to Hinder Efforts to Improve Indian Education, GAO-13-342T, February 27, 2013. 163.
|
|
U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, 1995, Report to accompany H.R. 4602, 103rd Cong., 2nd sess., June 17, 1994, H.Rept. 103-551, pp. 54-55; and U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Appropriations, Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, 1995, Report to accompany H.R. 4602, 103rd Cong., 2nd sess., June 28, 1994, S.Rept. 103-294, p. 55. 164.
|
|
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, "Tribal Consultation of Indian Education Topics," 60 Federal Register 53932, October 18, 1995. 165.
|
|
25 U.S.C §450j-1(b)(2). 166.
|
|
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Budget Justifications and Performance Information, Fiscal Year 2005 (Washington, DC: Department of the Interior, 2004), p. BIA-58. 167.
|
|
U.S. House of Representatives, "Explanatory Statement Submitted by Mr. Frelinghuysen of New Jersey, Chairman of the House Committee on Appropriations, Regarding the House Amendment to the Senate Amendments on H.R. 244," Congressional Record, vol. 163 (May 3, 2017), p. H3881. |
Tribal Education Departments National Assembly, The Elementary and Secondary Education Act Reauthorization Recommendations for Tribal Education Departments/Agencies, Boulder, CO, February 11, 2011, http://www.tedna.org/articles/esea_reauthorization_recommendations.pdf. |