海角大神

How mentoring helps Aboriginal teens create new futures

Ninety-three percent of AIME鈥檚 12th-grade Aboriginal students graduated from high school, exceeding Australia's overall graduation rate.

PERTH, WESTERN AUSTRALIA - AIME 12th-grade graduates pose with their hoodies and certificates at the AIME 12th-grade graduation session at Clontarf Aboriginal College, September 15, 2016. AIME is an aboriginal mentoring and education program that has indigenous school kids graduating at a rate well above the national non-indigenous average

Josh Kenworthy/海角大神

January 15, 2017

Jason Anketell remembers his early teen years growing up in Tennant Creek, a remote town of about 3,000 planted in the middle of Australia鈥檚 hot, sparsely populated Northern Territory.

Until the middle of 10th grade, says Mr. Anketell, an Aboriginal man from the Warumungu language group, he was at loose ends, getting into fights and 鈥渕ingling with the wrong people鈥 on streets tinged red by the dust of the rusted landscape.

Somewhere amid the chaos of 鈥渁lcohol, drugs, and domestic violence,鈥 a well-worn narrative in many rural Aboriginal communities, he began to 鈥渢hink twice 鈥 this is not the life I want in the future.鈥

Trump promised to bring jobs to the Rust Belt. The Sun Belt may get them instead.

Around that time, a youth worker pushed him to travel more than 2,500 miles to board at the Clontarf Aboriginal College, in Western Australia鈥檚 capital, Perth. Soon after he arrived, a school staff member suggested he get involved with the dedicated Aboriginal youth mentoring program AIME (Australian Indigenous Mentoring Experience).

鈥淪ince then I鈥檝e just been meeting with new people, being proud of who I am,鈥 Anketell says. 鈥淎IME is the only one who makes me feel confident enough to feel proud, to feel strong.鈥

That increased confidence is always the No. 1 thing any young person feels as the result of connecting with a mentor who cares about them, according聽to Judy MacCallum, an associate professor at Murdoch University鈥檚 School of Education. But, some Aboriginal people say, discovering a sense of self-worth can be a particularly steep climb聽for indigenous youth whose ancestral past includes mass killings, land dispossession, and denial of basic rights for much of white history.

鈥淲e have a saying: No shame at AIME,鈥 says Jason Burton, AIME鈥檚 center manager for Curtin and Murdoch Universities in Western Australia, at the Clontarf AIME grade 12 graduation night. 鈥樷淲e like to say 鈥榠ndigenous equals success鈥 鈥 we want to say, 'You guys are already successful, you're the oldest living culture on earth, you鈥檙e resilient.' It鈥檚 almost been beaten into them not to come out of their shells, but we're saying: Now there's nothing holding you back.鈥

Many top-down government programs have fallen short on winding back chronic inequalities such as a shorter life expectancy, disproportionate rates of incarceration, and poverty. Over the past decade, however, a proliferation of dedicated Aboriginal mentoring and scholarship programs like AIME are giving education advocates fresh hope that progress can be made on lifting roughly 160,000 Aboriginal children out of the chronic educational disadvantage that feeds such problems.

25 years after infamous land grabs, Zimbabwe turns a page

Unlike periodic government efforts to 鈥渃lose the gap,鈥 these corporate and privately funded nonprofits are created by, or in close collaboration with, Aboriginal people. And, some Aboriginal experts say, the egalitarian relationship between the youth and their often non-indigenous mentors is helping dissolve racial stereotypes as Australia鈥檚 national conversation around race and history evolves.

鈥淎boriginal people are sick and tired of having programs implemented, only to see them taken away or the funding diminished to a point where they鈥檙e no longer able to achieve or go about the objective of those programs,鈥 says Graeme Gower, a descendant of the Yawuru people from Broome and senior lecturer at Kurongkurl Katitjin, Edith Cowan University鈥檚 Centre for Indigenous Australian Education and Research. 鈥淧rojects like AIME that have been sustained and have been supported by other funding means they have impact, because things won鈥檛 just happen overnight.鈥

93 percent graduation rate

AIME is still only reaching a sliver of the kids in need, but it has a model it wants to share, with a view to reaching all 160,000 children by 2025. Earlier this month, it also launched a global campaign in the hope others around the world will take its blueprint to help other indigenous and minority people.

Its CEO, Jack Manning Bancroft, along with a number of close friends, launched the program in the Sydney suburb of Redfern about 12 years ago. Starting with 25 mentors and 25 students, it has grown into a national program that this year is connecting about 6,000 9th- to 12th-grade students with about 1,800 mentors.

In 2015, 93 percent of AIME鈥檚 533 12th-grade mentees graduated from high school, exceeding the national nonindigenous rate of 87 percent and the indigenous rate of 59 percent. Roughly three-quarters of those graduates transitioned to university or a job or training, the same as the national nonindigenous average. AIME follows up with all its students for two years after they leave high school to make sure they鈥檙e still on track.

To do this, the program partners with 17 universities, from which it draws its volunteer mentors. These mentors help run sessions with students from surrounding schools. The sessions range from drama, hip-hop, or writing a speech as if they were prime minister, to life skills like r茅sum茅-building and goal-setting for their transition after graduation. Additionally, mentors get together with students once a week for 鈥渢utor squad,鈥 helping them with homework. They sometimes act as a go-between when the teens aren鈥檛 comfortable talking directly with their school teachers.

For Anketell, it鈥檚 an approach that, in a few years, has transformed the 18-year-old鈥檚 outlook. Three weeks before he becomes the first person in his family to graduate from high school, he says, he just wants to be a 鈥渉ard-working man.鈥 That could mean staying in Perth and getting work in civic construction聽or heading back home to work as a mechanic. 聽

Jason Anketell (left) reads a graduation letter from mentor Amber Camp (right) after the AIME 12th-grade graduation session at Clontarf Aboriginal College in September. AIME is an aboriginal mentoring and education program that has indigenous school kids graduating at a rate above the national non-indigenous average.
Josh Kenworthy/Staff

Still, the program is far from perfect, observers say. For one, its model means it's still not reaching many kids with the highest needs in remote communities. Also, while AIME's model of drawing mentors from the university student pool has allowed them to grow quickly, levels of mentor commitment vary.

Even so, the two-way relationships Aboriginal students are building with their diverse, nonindigenous Australian and international student mentors are helping to wear down some ingrained stereotypes and giving Aboriginal people more of a voice, AIME folks and Mr. Gower say.

Mentor training is case in point. For the first hour, a roomful of mentors sit quietly, listening to the stories of four 11th-grade students. They ask them questions about everything from being racially bullied to how they could be better mentors. One mentee, Bailey, reminds them: 鈥淩emember, you can learn from us, too.鈥

Australia takes fresh look at race and history

In many ways, what鈥檚 happening at AIME is indicative of a new wave in Australia鈥檚 national conversation around race and history. For one, talk of changing the date of Australia Day 鈥 the day marking the 1788 landing of the First Fleet of British colonists at Botany Bay near Sydney, which some people refer to as invasion day 鈥 has entered the mainstream. Aboriginal people have been breaking down professional barriers and speaking out explicitly against racism, sometimes sparking an angry backlash.

Last year, Linda Burney, who is Wiradjuri, became the first aboriginal woman to be elected to a federal lower house seat from Barton, in New South Wales. Sky News foreign correspondent Stan Grant, also Wiradjuri, gave in which he declared that the Australian dream is rooted in racism.

Sharna Ninyette, program manager for AIME at the University of Notre Dame's Fremantle campus in Western Australia, believes that the number of nonindigenous voices willing to speak out in public forums against racism聽has grown.

鈥淭here鈥檚 actually a bigger group of non-Aboriginal people that stand up to say, 鈥楾hat鈥檚 not cool,鈥 " she says. "That is something you would not have seen five or 10 years ago, and that for these young fellas is exciting because they鈥檝e got people standing with them. Whereas when I was in school and it happened to me, it was very isolating.鈥

Indeed, the education picture has brightened considerably. Until the late 1940s, Aboriginal kids weren鈥檛 allowed to attend public schools, according to Dr. Gower. Between about 1910 and 1970, the so-called 鈥渟tolen generations鈥 of children were systematically whisked from their parents and placed far away on religious missions, which attempted to assimilate them.

Today, more Aboriginal youth are eager to go further than their grandparents and parents, many of who remember the time before they were granted the right to vote in 1962 鈥 or when they were counted as actual members of the Australian population for the first time in 1971.聽

Not going home 'empty handed'

Marlee Hutton, a Bardi Jawi woman in her early 20s who hails from the far north of Western Australia, exemplifies her generation鈥檚 stretch. Back in high school, she was granted a scholarship to attend Perth鈥檚 Iona Presentation College by Madalah, an organization that offers scholarships to Australia's best boarding schools for Aboriginal kids from remote communities, and connects them with mentors.

Ms. Hutton, who has worked for AIME since it expanded to Western Australia in 2012, will graduate from university this year with a double major in marine and environmental science. Ultimately, she says, all the years she has spent in the city have not watered down her connection to culture or 鈥渃ountry.鈥 She wants to return home, but not until she鈥檚 qualified and empowered to work with her community.

Her high school mentor, Naomi, an Aboriginal woman, stopped her going home 鈥渆mpty-handed鈥 a number of times.

鈥淭here were times when I really wanted to go home, but Naomi really ... pushed the fact that I have the ability to do a lot more than I think I can," she says, "and it鈥檚 important that I do something, and don鈥檛 just give up and go back home.鈥