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TitleShoshoni and Bannock Immersion Charter School To Open in Fort Hall
BodyFrom http://lmtribune.com/article_541fffe9-1d31-5983-bba1-2b8111c16a89.html

School puts focus on tribal language
By NATE SUNDERLAND
August 13, 2013

Reviving the Shoshoni, and, eventually, the Bannock language, is the goal of the Chief Tahgee Elementary Academy, a language immersion charter school opening this fall in Fort Hall.

"Our native languages are on the verge of becoming extinct because only the older people are speaking (them)," language specialist Merceline Boyer said. "Our younger kids are not picking it up; and it's important because language is our (cultural) identity."

Once the first language of the Shoshone Indians, Shoshoni was replaced by English as the tribe's primary language during the last 50 years. School officials estimate less than 20 percent of tribal members speak the native language. Fewer still, speak the native Bannock language.

School officials hope the charter school will reverse that trend. Although in the same language group, the languages are significantly different. As a result, students will chose to learn either Shoshoni or Bannock.

Read the full article at http://lmtribune.com/article_541fffe9-1d31-5983-bba1-2b8111c16a89.html

Speaking of Shoshone, here is an article about a recently-developed video game in the language: http://scienceblog.com/65584/first-shoshone-language-video-game/#UHS19F9xCq3szm3D.99
SourceLewiston Tribune
Inputdate2013-08-18 08:29:08
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Publishdate2013-08-19 00:00:00
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