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Harvard Gazette

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An echo of Harvard in New Mexico

Coordinator suggests students look east during visits to Native American high schools

By Jon Chase

Photos by Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographer

Monday, December 19, 2011

My name is Jason. I am Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Jemez, Laguna. I was born here. This is my home, said Jason Packineau, community coordinator for the Harvard University Native American Program, as he opened his presentation at the Native American Community Academy in Albuquerque in typical fashion by naming his tribal affiliations.

The Albuquerque academy was one of four schools that Packineau and I visited on a recent trip to New Mexico. We also stopped at Bernalillo High School outside Albuquerque, at the Santa Fe Indian School, and at the Walatowa Charter High School in Jemez Pueblo, one of 19 pueblos that are self-governing entities in New Mexico. The purpose of the trip was to generate interest for Harvard among Native American students, as well as to host a Harvard booth at the National Indian Education Association conference in Albuquerque. As a photographer with Harvard Public Affairs & Communications, I went along to document Harvard’s stepped-up recruitment efforts in the Southwest.

For many of the high school students we visited, the Harvard name was simply an abstraction. But when they learned the College waives tuition for families earning less than $65,000, and will even fly out prospective students who have been accepted, you could almost see the wheels turning in their heads as they gathered up more Harvard literature from the table.

One particularly motivated, pony-tailed girl at Bernalillo High School had brought along her transcript for Packineau to assess. Standing nearby, her student counselor looked on, smiling ever so slightly like a proud parent. “If not this year,” the counselor said, “then next — we’ll send one of these students to Harvard, you just wait and see.”