Former Scholarship Recipient Inspires Girls to Win On and Off the Court
Thursday, April 9, 2020

Applications for Sealaska’s scholarships close on April 15th!  A scholarship can be a tremendous source of support. Over the course of the next week, we’ll bring you stories of former scholarship recipients who are pursuing great careers and making a difference in our communities. For more information on scholarships and how to apply, go to the shareholder portal MySealaska.com or Sealaska Heritage Institute.

Karli Brakes Sealaska scholarship recipient

From her first season playing basketball at age 8, Karli Brakes was hooked. Now she’s taking her lifelong love of the game and using it to help other young women identify their goals and chart positive futures.

Brakes, who is Tlingit Eagle of the Kaagwaantaan (Wolf) Clan, was a Sealaska scholarship recipient. She once excelled as a point guard in Juneau but after three years of collegiate play, she’s back in Alaska, coaching the Anchorage Christian Schools junior high girls team and serving as assistant to Head Coach Chad Dyson on the high school girls varsity team.

Brakes said she got her start in basketball because her parents pushed her to try everything Juneau had to offer as a kid — soccer, gymnastics, dance, swimming and more. But when she reached middle school, she decided to focus on just basketball and soccer, and her focus, hard work and natural talent paved the way to three years of college basketball play.

“For some reason, even though I’m one of the smallest girls, it just came a little more natural to me,” said Brakes, who cited her height at 5 feet 1.5 inches (she rounds up to 5 feet 2 inches on rosters).

Brakes describes herself as a traditional, old-school point guard — the kind who is on the floor to make plays and pass to their teammates, not necessarily to rack up points themselves. The mentality of putting team over self isn’t as common in what is now a flashier basketball era, but it does serve her well as coach.

Brakes was inspired by Dyson’s approach with the high school girls — asking them to identify goals for basketball and life, and pushing them to investigate schools and figure out how to reach their goals. In her own life, Brakes said, basketball and scholarship support enabled her to graduate debt-free and start her professional life on solid financial footing.

Brakes played at Peninsula College in Port Angeles, Washington, for two years and earned an associate degree before moving to play at Lethbridge College in Lethbridge, Alberta.

Because she didn’t have Canadian citizenship, though, she was unable to work. And although her tuition was covered, she still needed money for living expenses and had few options for getting it. After a year, she returned to Alaska to finish her degree with a laser-like focus on balancing work and school. Basketball fell off the list of priorities as she worked two jobs and attended the University of Alaska Anchorage full-time to earn her bachelor’s degree in business management with a minor in economics in 2016.

After she got her current job as a public outreach coordinator for the Pebble Partnership, she finally had some free time on her hands and immediately started looking for an opportunity to renew her involvement with the sport she loves.

Although the first season was a “building season” for Brakes’ ACS junior high team, she’s excited about the possibility to help shape the lives of these young women.

“I’m really grateful to be participating in something that has molded my life,” Brakes said. “I hope I can make even the slightest impression on these young women, to help them see that they can be in any industry they want, or be involved in a controversial project that people aren’t always rooting for; and the bonds with your teammates you’ll carry for the rest of your life. If I can be any part of that, I feel like I’m giving back.”

Brakes said she wanted to encourage shareholders and descendants in high school or even earlier to take the time to look for scholarships and start thinking about their futures.

“It’s 100% worth it — every minute you put toward looking into the resources available to you,” she said. “Sealaska is a great opportunity for anyone looking to graduate and pursue their dreams without a lot of the setbacks a lot of people have to go through. It’s never too early to start planning when you have even the slightest idea what you want to do in life.”

Upcoming Deadline
April 15, 2020: Final deadline to submit all scholarship application materials

More information is available at the shareholder portal at MySealaska.com and Sealaska Heritage Institute also has information on our scholarships and others, including the Preparing Indigenous Teachers and Administrators for Alaska Schools (PITAAS) program.

Did you know?

  • Since last year, part-time students are now eligible for scholarships.
  • Scholarships are awarded to students enrolled at vocational and technical schools, graduate schools, four-year colleges and other types of post-secondary programs.
  • Scholarships are funded by Sealaska and administered by Sealaska Heritage Institute.
  • Descendants are eligible to apply — not just shareholders.

Calling all former Sealaska scholarship recipients!
Are you a former scholarship recipient? Or do you know someone who is? We want to hear from you! Reach out at webmaster@sealaska.com and let us know how education has shaped your journey. Be sure to include a photo!


News Search


13 results found

Posted 7/13/2020
Posted 7/13/2020
Sealaska shareholders have told us that education and vocational scholarships are a top priority. Sealaska is proud to recognize our scholarship recipients. Marissa Brakes has many different interests when it comes to her future career in law. Through internships at Sealaska and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Boise, Idaho, three years of work at a civil litigation firm, and her role ...

Posted 6/29/2020
Posted 6/29/2020
Sealaska shareholders have told us that education and vocational scholarships are a top priority. Sealaska is proud to recognize our scholarship recipients. Brian James is among the first class of Sealaska scholarship recipients who are attending college part time, and the expanded eligibility offered by Sealaska, “is honestly life changing,” he said.James is 51 and will technically...

Posted 5/21/2020
Posted 5/21/2020
Sealaska Scholarship Recipient Morgan LoveSealaska shareholders and descendants who applied for scholarships for the 2020–2021 academic year received their award letters this month, marking an all-time high in the level of scholarship support provided by Sealaska.The year 2020 was significant for the program. It marked the largest number of students ever awarded, the most Sealaska scholarship money ever distributed, and the highest award amounts to recipients. The corporation awarded $1.34 milli...

Posted 4/14/2020
Posted 4/14/2020
Applications for Sealaska’s scholarships are due today! A scholarship can be a tremendous source of support. For more information on scholarships and how to apply, go to the shareholder portal MySealaska.com or Sealaska Heritage Institute.Rick Brock, Dino Brock, and Archie Young are fierce competitors but they’re also family. This set of two brothers and a cousin are well-known and respected high school basketball coaches in Petersburg and Mt. Edgecumbe. All three are working hard to encourage, ...

Posted 4/14/2020
Posted 4/14/2020
Applications for Sealaska’s scholarships close on April 15th! A scholarship can be a tremendous source of support. For more information on scholarships and how to apply, go to the shareholder portal MySealaska.com or Sealaska Heritage Institute.How does a child from the small village of Angoon end up coaching college basketball all over the country?It’s not a straight line, that’s for sure.Jamestown is a Sealaska scholarship recipient who works as the assistant basketball coach at Western Oregon...

Posted 3/30/2020
Posted 3/30/2020
Due to the impact of COVID-19, the Sealaska scholarship deadline has been extended to April 15.The decision was precipitated by a number of shareholders and descendants who have lost their jobs due to the virus and who now want to go to school, according to Joe Nelson, Sealaska board chair and ex-officio trustee of Sealaska Heritage Institute.“We are living in a time when we have to be nimble and respond wherever we can to people who are experiencing financial hardship because of the virus. This...

Posted 2/25/2020
Posted 2/25/2020
Morgan Love is one of 359 students who were awarded Sealaska scholarships in 2019.Did you know that approximately 1,000 Sealaska shareholders and their families live in California? This is a story about a young shareholder from Southern California on a journey to understand her own Native identity. And she is serving others as she navigates her way.Introducing shareholder Morgan Love, a Sealaska scholarship recipient studying psychology and global health in her first year at UCLA (University of ...

Posted 2/10/2020
Posted 2/10/2020
Kellen London is one of 62 part-time students who were awarded Sealaska scholarships in 2019. Last year was the first year the scholarship program included part-time students.Some might think that being a part-time student means going back to school while raising kids or pursuing a second career. Or maybe it means finishing the degree you always wanted to. Not always so.Meet Kellen London, part-time Sealaska scholarship recipient studying at Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado. Kellen gradua...

Posted 1/31/2020
Posted 1/31/2020
Stephanie Jenkins is one of 62 part-time students who were awarded Sealaska scholarships in 2019. Last year was the first year the scholarship program included part-time students. Stephanie Jenkins, part-time scholarship recipient finishes master’s program in nursing; opens door to Tlingit culture and identity When Stephanie Jenkins first applied for a Sealaska scholarship in 1998, she had no idea she was opening a door to her Tlingit culture and identity. This identity ultimately allowed her to...

Posted 1/9/2020
Posted 1/9/2020
Attention Sealaska students!Scholarship applications for the 2020–2021 academic year are now open to Sealaska shareholder and descendant students. Every year Sealaska awards hundreds of full-time and part-time merit-based scholarships to our student leaders.Since 1981, Sealaska has been funding scholarships as part of our long-time commitment to education. Scholarship recipients have gone on to become scholars and leaders in our Sealaska communities and beyond — including board youth advisors, A...

Posted 1/8/2020
Posted 1/8/2020
Dear Shareholders, Sigóowu Yées Táakw! Happy New Year! As we greet 2020, I am most hopeful for the coming decade. I am proud that Sealaska dedicated $10 million last November to support Lingít (Tlingit), Xaad Kíl (Haida) and Sm’algyax (Tsimshian) language revitalization. We anticipate spending $500,000 annually for the next 10 years. In December, I issued a challenge to all shareholders to submit either a short essay or a six-word story highlighting what traditional languages mean to them and w...

Posted 11/26/2019
Posted 11/26/2019
Dear Sealaska family,At a recent meeting, we established a fund to support Lingít (Tlingit), Xaad Kíl (Haida) and Shm’algyack (Tsimshian) language revitalization for the next 10 years. We anticipate spending $500,000 annually from the interest earned on this $10 million fund. We have limited time and resources, i.e., speakers and money. We need to use them efficiently and effectively.  We are not the first ones to commit to this effort and we cannot be the last. We need you and many others to co...