Iḷisaġvik College
Iḷisaġvik College is a public community college in Utqiagvik, Alaska. Operated by the North Slope Borough, it is the only tribally-controlled college in Alaska and is the northernmost accredited community college in the United States. The college is located within the boundaries of the North Slope, an 89,000-square mile region of Arctic tundra which is not connected by road, save for the 414-mile Dalton Highway from north of Fairbanks, to Deadhorse, near Prudhoe Bay, or by rail. In recent years, as a result of global warming, ocean access has no longer been ice-locked for nine months of each year. The region is home to the Inupiat people.
History
Iḷisaġvik College is a direct outgrowth of the Native American self-determination movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s. With the formation of a home-rule government called the North Slope Borough in 1972, the Iñupiat people took their first steps towards regaining control of their lives and destinies.In 2005, IC was established as the only Tribal College in the state of Alaska. It was federally recognized in 2007 as the 36th tribal college in the United States. The college had its origins in 1986, when the North Slope Borough worked with the University of Fairbanks and created the North Slope Higher Education Center. The school changed its name in 1997 to Arctic Sivunmun Iḷisaġvik College and was under the leadership of college president, Edna Ahgeak MacLean. In 1995 the Borough passed an ordinance incorporating Iḷisaġvik College as a public and independent non-profit corporation. The school moved to the facility previously used by the United States Naval Arctic Research Laboratory. Iḷisaġvik College was the lead institution in the 1997 creation of the Consortium for Alaska Native Higher Education.
In 1996, IC took over the Iñupiat Heritage Center.
The College serves the North Slope Borough and the Iñupiat people.
Presidents
Indigenous leaders have led IC since its inception. All are local Iñupiat people except Brooke Gondara who is Northern Cheyenne.S. No. | Name | Term |
1. | Benjamin Nageak | |
2. | Edna Ahgeak MacLean | 1995–2005 |
3. | Beverly Patkotak Grinage | 2005–2010 |
4. | Brooke Gondara | 2010–2011 |
5. | Pearl Kiyawn Nageak Brower | 2012–present |