New Yukon First Nations school board will 'amplify' on-the-land teachings in Beaver Creek
CBC
When the season changes in Beaver Creek, Yukon, six First Nations students of all ages go to culture camps to learn how to hunt beavers and bears from an elder.
So when it came time to vote for the historic First Nations school board last week, it was a unanimous yes from those in the community of 111 who cast their ballots.
"It's really good to have something like that," elder David Frank Johnny Sr. told CBC News a few days after the vote. "The system that is in place right now just doesn't seem to work for our people."
The community's school, Nelnah Bessie John School, is one of eight across the Yukon that will join the new First Nations School Board.
The school board wants to incorporate more on-the-land teachings, experiential learning and Indigenous languages in their schools in addition to the B.C. curriculum currently in place.
In Beaver Creek, people like Johnny say it'll just be a way to formalize the on-the-land teaching they already do for their young people.
Johnny started running on-the-land camps on the traditional territory of the White River First Nation in the 1980s.
At first, he only took his own children and his wife out to their camp in the bush, but over time, he welcomed students from across the territory.
Now, he and his wife run a moose camp in the fall. Come spring, the students are back out on the land for a muskrat camp. Between the two camps, Senior also makes time throughout the year to teach students about bears.
During a camp, Johnny teaches students skills they need to survive on the land, like how to skin animals, set nets, and how to preserve dry meat.
Many times after attending an on-the-land camp, Johnny said most of the students don't want to go back to the conventional classroom. They would rather stay out, even in sometimes subzero temperatures, to keep learning.
"They said, 'can we stay a few more days?' But you know how school policies are, you gotta follow the regulations," he said.
"Our people fail in [the territory's] system because we know in our blood that we should be out there, learning."
Johnny also set up a tent near the school where students can come by to watch how he skins the animals he's hunted.