Sunday, March 29, 2020

Education during the COVID 19 crisis....

Students and parents:

On March 30th, there will be a district wide phone conference and a further phone conference with Sprague High School Staff and our principal Chad Barkes.

Throughout the past two weeks, there has been constant communication from Oregon Education, our school district superintendent, Christy Perry, and our Principal Mr. Barkes.   Their concern for you as students is of great importance---both your physical and emotional wellness, and your educational progress. We are going to be working together to figure out how to relay some distance learning to you during this next month or so as we are quarantining ourselves during this epidemic.

I have also been very concerned about all my students---both the economic impact on your families and the isolation.   Once we get up and running, I will do all I can to make education as interesting as possible.  You have been wonderful students this year----so I hope that we can continue to connect through some of the supplemental assignments that will be made available to you.

Stay tuned for more!

Mrs. Olsen

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Taos Blue Lake, New Mexico

Image result for taos blue lake


In 10th grade history, students are learning about the American Indian Movement. This last summer I received a National Endowment for the Humanities grant to study in Santa Fe, New Mexico. We were taken to the Taos Pueblo, outside of Taos, New Mexico to learn more about their sacred river, and its source, Taos Blue Lake.

Taos Blue Lake is in the mountains above the Pueblo. The setting is beautiful, and it is patrolled by Native Americans who try to keep the site sacred and pristine, for to them, it is the source of the Pueblo peoples.

During the disorganized and predatory time of reservations and land grabs, Taos Blue Lake ended up in the hands of the federal government. After years of advocating for the return of their lands, Richard Nixon signed the return of the lake to the Taos Pueblo. He said,
“this is a bill that represents justice, because in 1906 an injustice was done in which land involved in this bill, 48,000 acres, was taken from the Indians involved, the Taos Pueblo Indians. The Congress of the United States now returns that land to whom it belongs… I can’t think of anything more appropriate or any action that could make me more proud as President of the United States. For this act, they revere him. If you google Taos Blue Lake, you will only find one picture. For the Taos people, it is so sacred, that they do not want it seen by those who are not of the tribe.