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Gatherings that teach, connect, and build community

I came across the book Potlatch as Pedagogy: Learning Through Ceremony in a small bookshop in Ketchikan, Alaska. In it, Indigenous educator Sara Florence Davidson and her father, Haida artist Robert Davidson, share stories from their family that weave together how potlatch gatherings build community collective knowledge. 

Nine sk’ad’a (learning) principles emerge from these stories:

  1. Learning emerges from strong relationships
  2. Learning emerges from authentic experiences
  3. Learning emerges from curiosity
  4. Learning occurs through observation
  5. Learning occurs through contribution
  6. Learning occurs through recognizing and encouraging strengths
  7. Learning honors the power of the mind
  8. Learning honors history and story
  9. Learning honors aspects of spirituality and protocol

This is the second time that Indigenous methods of teaching and learning have captivated my attention, this time on the heels of running a conference. My last tasks before escaping on vacation in Alaska were to compile surveys and distill the conference day into an Impact Report, which we share back to the conference community and with partners and sponsors. I rewatched the conference video generously made by Time Magic Studios, reliving the day and why it mattered.

With my brain still debriefing the Conference and the Davidson book in hand, I began reflecting on its core questions:

Sara Davidson shows us the way, naming these principles and giving us examples of how they’ve worked in the context of community and schools. They resonate with our conference experiences as well:

In explaining her collaboration with her father, Sara Davidson quoted him: “We are all connected to the past by a thin thread. And when we come together as a group, then those threads form quite a thick rope.” When we gather, we have the potential to form something powerful. 

I’m grateful for this book to inspire reflection, for the privilege of living on the traditional and contemporary territories of the Coast Salish people, and the opportunity to work with inspiring Native nonprofit leaders as a part of Native Action Network’s nonprofit learning network. 

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