Kickapoo Nation School is a K-12 tribal school in Powhattan, Kansas, United States. It is affiliated with the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIE). [1] It is the sole tribal school in the state. [2] The school is 6 miles (9.7 km) north of the Kickapoo Indian Reservation. [3] The school serves, in addition to Kickapoo people, the Potawotami tribe and the Sac and Fox tribe. [4]
In 1981 it moved into its current facility, which was formerly used by another school. [3]
In 2004 Brent Wasko of the St. Joseph News-Press reported that area residents did not positively perceive the school, and that the school community was working to fight that perception. [4]
The Kansas Department of Education considers Kickapoo School a "nonpublic" school. [2] The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) counts it as a public school. [5]
As of 2006 [update] it admits students not registered in Native American tribes but charges them tuition for them as the BIE only gives money for enrolled members of tribes; a non-tribal family price as of that year was $200 per semester or $100 for one student. [2]
It has a bilingual English- Kickapoo language program, the only such program in Kansas for an indigenous American language. [2] The school made efforts to preserve the language. [3]
According to the Topeka Capital-Journal, by 2006 there was positive attention on the school's BIE-funded Family and Child Education (FACE) program which has home-based education for both parents and children. [2]
As of 2006 [update] the school did not have funds to have laptops for their students compared to public schools that received more funding. However beginning in fall 2006 it planned to establish a virtual learning program to make up for subject matters in which it lacks on-site teachers. [2]
In 2004 it had 91 students, all of them being Native American. [4] In 2016 it had 58 students. Many students come from the Kickapoo reservation and a number reside in Topeka. [3]
In 2016 it had eight teachers. [3]
As of 2006 [update] because of relatively low enrollment numbers, athletic programs often struggled to find enough students. [2] In 2004 the track team had seven members. [4] By 2016 it was making an attempt to form a track team but it had no athletic teams at all at the moment. [3]
39°45′32″N 95°38′08″W / 39.7589°N 95.6355°W
Kickapoo Nation School is a K-12 tribal school in Powhattan, Kansas, United States. It is affiliated with the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIE). [1] It is the sole tribal school in the state. [2] The school is 6 miles (9.7 km) north of the Kickapoo Indian Reservation. [3] The school serves, in addition to Kickapoo people, the Potawotami tribe and the Sac and Fox tribe. [4]
In 1981 it moved into its current facility, which was formerly used by another school. [3]
In 2004 Brent Wasko of the St. Joseph News-Press reported that area residents did not positively perceive the school, and that the school community was working to fight that perception. [4]
The Kansas Department of Education considers Kickapoo School a "nonpublic" school. [2] The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) counts it as a public school. [5]
As of 2006 [update] it admits students not registered in Native American tribes but charges them tuition for them as the BIE only gives money for enrolled members of tribes; a non-tribal family price as of that year was $200 per semester or $100 for one student. [2]
It has a bilingual English- Kickapoo language program, the only such program in Kansas for an indigenous American language. [2] The school made efforts to preserve the language. [3]
According to the Topeka Capital-Journal, by 2006 there was positive attention on the school's BIE-funded Family and Child Education (FACE) program which has home-based education for both parents and children. [2]
As of 2006 [update] the school did not have funds to have laptops for their students compared to public schools that received more funding. However beginning in fall 2006 it planned to establish a virtual learning program to make up for subject matters in which it lacks on-site teachers. [2]
In 2004 it had 91 students, all of them being Native American. [4] In 2016 it had 58 students. Many students come from the Kickapoo reservation and a number reside in Topeka. [3]
In 2016 it had eight teachers. [3]
As of 2006 [update] because of relatively low enrollment numbers, athletic programs often struggled to find enough students. [2] In 2004 the track team had seven members. [4] By 2016 it was making an attempt to form a track team but it had no athletic teams at all at the moment. [3]
39°45′32″N 95°38′08″W / 39.7589°N 95.6355°W