Friday, October 4, 2013

Author Ann Clark: The Chalkboard Champion of Native American Students

 

Many distinguished educators have dedicated their professional lives to working with underprivileged student populations. One such teacher was Ann Nolan Clark.

Ann Clark was born on December 5, 1896, in Las Vegas, New Mexico. When Ann was 21, she graduated from New Mexico Normal School, now known as New Mexico Highlands University, in Las Vegas, New Mexico.

Ann inaugurated her teaching career as a professor of English at Highlands University, but in 1923, she accepted a position teaching reading to Native American children in a one-room schoolhouse at the Black Rock School in Zuni, and then at Tesuque. Little did she know that this position would last twenty-five years. While teaching in the Indian schools, Ann observed that the Native American children learned more easily when their primers were geared towards their life experiences. She began writing primers with characters and situations that honored the the Pueblo way of life. Many of these primers were then published by mainstream publishing companies. She eventually broadened her scope and wrote children's books with Navajo, Sioux, Finnish, and Hispanic characters. She also published a number of professional articles under the pseudonym Marie Dunne.

Between 1940 and 1951, the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs published fifteen of Ann's books. Her book In My Mother's House, illustrated by Pueblo artist Velino Herrera, earned a Caldecott Honor Book Award in 1942. During the 1940s, Ann also wrote multi-cultural books for the Haskell Foundation and the Haskell Indian Nations University at Lawrence, Kansas. One of them was The Slim Butte Raccoon, illustrated by Andrew Standing Soldier.

In 1945, the Institute for Inter-American Affairs funded an educational trip for Ann to travel to Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Peru, and Brazil. Her experiences on this trip led her to write such books as Magic Money, Looking-for-Something, and Secret of the Andes, which garnered her the 1953 Newberry Medal. Ann was also given the Distinguished Service Award by the Bureau of Indian Affairs in 1962 and the Regina Medial by the Catholic Library Association in 1963.

This remarkable educator passed away on December 13, 1995. During her lifetime, she published over forty books, thirty-one of them about Native American culture.

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