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Galena Rural Practicum 2009 Renee Moseng, Ann Stone, and Jon Estes
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Galena

Dec 03, 2014

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annmstone

Secondary MAT rural experience in Galena, Alaska.
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Page 1: Galena

GalenaRural Practicum 2009

Renee Moseng, Ann Stone, and Jon Estes

Page 2: Galena

Community and Culture

• Galena serves as the transportation, government and commercial center for the western Interior

• Federal, state, city, school and village government jobs dominate, but Galena has many other jobs in air transportation and retail businesses

• Galena's original residents were Louden, a tribe of the Koyukon Athabascan people

• The population of about 700 people is mixed Athabascan (64 percent) and non-Native (white, Latino, and Asian)

Page 3: Galena

Community and Culture

• Other seasonal employment, such as construction work and BLM fire fighting, provide income as well

• Subsistence food sources for residents include salmon, whitefish, moose and berries

Page 4: Galena

Community and Culture

• Galena was established in 1918 near an old Athabascan fish camp called Henry's Point and was a supply and shipping point for nearby lead ore mines

• In 1920, Athabascans from Louden began moving to Galena to sell wood to steamboats and to work hauling freight for the mines

• A school was created in the 1920s

• In World War II, a military air field was built adjacent to the civilian airport

Page 5: Galena

Community and Culture

• During the 1950s, the the Air Force constructed additional military facilities at Galena and the nearby Campion Air Force Station, in support of Galena's mission as a forward operating base under the 5072nd Air Base Group, headquartered at Elmendorf Air Force Base

• Improvements to the airport and the local infrastructure provided economic growth for the area

Page 6: Galena

Community and CultureGalena supports

• an Olympic sized swimming pool

• a modern dental and health care facility

• a restaurant

• a rural campus of University of Alaska Fairbanks

• a radio station (KIYU)

• tribal offices for the Louden, and many tribal and youth organizations.

Hobo’s Bar and Grill

Page 7: Galena

Community and Culture

• the Iditarod Sled Dog Race

• the Spring Carnival

• the Yukon Jamboree (fiddle music)

• the Iron Dog Snow Machine Race

• the Yukon 800 boat race.

Galena hosts several special events

local sled dogs

Page 8: Galena

Sidney Huntington’s Great Idea

• The Campion Air Force Station was phased out during the late 70's and early 80's and closed in 1993

• The idea for a boarding school in Galena came from the community, with the powerful backing of Sidney Huntington, a Athabascan elder respected throughout the state who served on the board of fish and game.

• Mr. Huntington and others saw the closure of the Galena Air Base as an opportunity to use the facilities as a site for students living in rural Alaska to get the best possible education.

• The school started in 1997 as Project Education Charter School with 40 students working on project-based education

Page 9: Galena

• The school was renamed the Galena Interior Learning Academy (G.I.L.A.) and offers vocational training in automotive technology, aviation, cosmetology, and culinary arts joined to a rigorous academic curriculum, with 117 students

• G.I.L.A. turned the Air Force buildings into classrooms, student facilities and residential living quarters

• The entire base officially became the property of the school with a ceremony in September 2008

Page 10: Galena

Map of G.I.L.A.

Page 11: Galena

Galena Interior Learning Academy

Page 12: Galena

Educational Culture

• Galena School District promotes the PEAK philosophy

• PEAK Learning Systems helps to make learning by all students a reality through enhanced student motivation, improved curriculum and assessment that is aligned with research supported brain compatible instruction

• The students of G.I.L.A. and the Galena’s local high school, Sidney Huntington, attend classes at both locations

• Bus transportation between the high school and the boarding school is provided by Waldo

Page 13: Galena

Vocational Opportunities

Page 14: Galena

Dorm life at G.I.L.A.

Page 15: Galena

Pedagogy

• G.I.L.A. is a public school that offers vocational opportunities that most rural high schools are unable to provide

• G.I.L.A. host students from all parts of Alaska including major cities like Fairbanks and Anchorage

• Renee says, “Wow, these kids will actually be able to get a good job right out of high school!”

• Renee, Jon and Ann met a former G.I.L.A. aviation student as they boarded their Frontier Airlines flight

• G.I.L.A. has an incredibly low dropout rate

Page 16: Galena

Galena City School and SHHS

Page 17: Galena

Pedagogy• Galena City Schools reflect the cultures of the students

enrolled by offering Indian education programs, Koyukon studies and the Iditarod project

• Interior Distance Education of Alaska is the homeschool support program of the Galena City School District since 1997. IDEA serves 3500 students

• Galena is the “little district that could.” In 1999, the dropout rate was 56%. In year 2004, 85% residential students passed the state and national benchmarks and no students dropped out.

• The school board, the city council and the tribal council were key players in this dramatic turnaround. This is when the PEAK program was implemented.

Page 18: Galena

Pedagogy and PEAK• PEAK is based on six keys related the physical and

emotional environment of a school; educational materials and assessment tools; instructional strategies, style and techniques

• safety

• success

• love and belonging

• freedom and independence

• fun and enjoyment

• valued purpose

Page 19: Galena

Snapshots of Galena

Page 20: Galena

Snapshots of Galena