This document summarizes and analyzes a scholarly article about the education of Native American children through government-run day schools in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It discusses how the federal government established day schools as part of its broader assimilation campaign following the 1887 Dawes Act. While day schools greatly outnumbered boarding schools, little historical research has examined the conditions and curriculum in day schools. The document analyzes available government reports and studies, finding that day schools suffered from underfunding and health issues similar to boarding schools. It argues day schools deserve more comprehensive historical analysis to better understand the full impacts of the federal government's assimilation policies on Native American communities and families.