Office
of the Secretary
For Immediate Release: August 23,
2001
Norton and
McCaleb: Final Indian School Hooked Up to Internet
-Last
roadblock facing Indian children on the Information Superhighway knocked
down-
"The last roadblock facing Indian children
on the Information Superhighway was knocked down today," Norton said. "The
President has told us to leave no child behind, and BIA, working with incredible
partners, has turned that vision into a reality for teachers, students
and communities throughout Indian Country." "I'm delighted to be part of the excitement
and pride that is in all of our hearts as we reach out to the last four
BIA schools and to Indian school children everywhere and give them the
wonders of the Internet and a connection with one another," Assistant Secretary
McCaleb said at today's ceremony at Chichiltah/Jones school.
BIA created the Access Native America
project, with the goal of bringing online all 185 elementary and secondary
schools, serving nearly 50,000 students, many in some of the most remote
locations in the United States. At the time, only one school had Internet
access. Partnerships were forged. The U.S. Geological Survey provided engineering
and networking expertise, Microsoft, Intel, and ProjectNeat provided hardware
and software, and the Universities of Texas and Kansas developed education
content and training for teachers and students.
This summer, 50 teachers from BIA schools
received training at the Pueblo of Laguna, Laguna, NM through Intel's "Teach
to the Future" program. Each teacher will return to their school and train
10 of their co-workers how to connect technology with instruction. By the
end of next year, more than 500 teachers will be skilled at using the Internet
in their classrooms. In addition, parents, and others in Indian communities,
will be given the opportunity to use Internet access at the school facilities
to link to online libraries, museums, scientific and educational sites
and to strengthen and share their unique cultural heritage.
The last four BIA schools given Internet
access were Winslow Dormitory, Winslow, Ariz., Baca Community School, Prewitt,
N.M., Jicarilla Dormitory, Dulce, N.M. and the Chichiltah Community School,
where today's event was held. The program's total cost was about $20 million.
-
DOI -
or Stephanie Hanna 202-208-6416

(WASHINGTON) - "Secretary of
the Interior Gale Norton today praised the strong partnership that brought
the last Bureau of Indian Affairs school online. Assistant Secretary for
Indian Affairs Neal McCaleb, teachers and students celebrated the final
hookup today at the Chichiltah/Jones Ranch Community School on the Navajo
Reservation outside Gallup, N.M.
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