It is tribally controlled and is affiliated with the Bureau of Indian Education (BIE).
Concrete replacement facilities were built and school resumed in fall 1916.
[2] By 2004 the school began hiring teachers from other countries to fill vacancies.
[4] In 1986, in addition to English and Lakota, the school had the following foreign languages available: German, Latin, Russian, and Spanish.
Some languages classes were only open to high school students.