Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

New Ontario University Program Hopes To Boost Number Of Aboriginal Teachers

The Canadian Press, 20 Jan, 2016 11:33 AM
  • New Ontario University Program Hopes To Boost Number Of Aboriginal Teachers
TORONTO — An Ontario university will offer a new program next fall that it hopes will help boost aboriginal numbers among teachers.
 
Cathy Bruce, interim dean of education at Trent University, says the school will offer an indigenous bachelor of education degree program.
 
 
The new program is partly in response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission report last summer that called on all levels of government to change policies to repair problems caused by residential schools.
 
The report also recommended that students be taught about the history and current plight of First Nations, Metis and Inuit.
 
Bruce says the school is still accepting applications and hopes to have 15 students, all who self-identify as aboriginal, start the first year of the program in September.
 
She says the new program is working closely with the university's indigenous studies program and will offer courses such as an Ojibwa language course and math course specifically related to indigenous culture.
 
"We need to increase the actual number of indigenous teachers in Ontario schools so that students see those role models and students see that they too can become a teacher," Bruce said.
 
Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ont., offers a similar program that allows graduates to teach children up to grade 6, whereas future Trent graduates will be able to teach through high school.
 
Some of the professors in the new program will be aboriginal, Bruce said.
 
"And if this program grows as we hope and believe it will, we can hire more aboriginal instructors," she said.
 
A report released last summer said public school teachers in Ontario didn't receive enough training on aboriginal issues.
 
Only 29 per cent of elementary schools and 47 per cent of secondary schools offer training on aboriginal issues to teachers, said a report by People for Education, a research and advocacy group.
 
Annie Kidder, the group's executive director, called on the provincial government to implement immediate changes to add more professional development for teachers about issues facing aboriginal people in Canada.

MORE National ARTICLES

Woman Dead Falling From Party Bus In Vancouver

Woman Dead Falling From Party Bus In Vancouver
Sgt. Randy Fincham says police received a report around 9:30 Saturday evening that a woman had fallen from a moving party bus at Burrard and West Hastings Street.

Woman Dead Falling From Party Bus In Vancouver

Alberta's Rachel Notley Says Document Shredding Ban Continues At Environment Department

Alberta's Rachel Notley Says Document Shredding Ban Continues At Environment Department
EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says a ban on document shredding will continue in the Environment Department until she is sure no more documents are improperly destroyed.

Alberta's Rachel Notley Says Document Shredding Ban Continues At Environment Department

Firefighting Funds Depleted: Record Number Of Wildfires In National Parks

Firefighting Funds Depleted: Record Number Of Wildfires In National Parks
Wildfires scorched a record amount of Canada's national parks last year — the latest in a number of long, hot summers that have almost entirely depleted Parks Canada's firefighting reserve.

Firefighting Funds Depleted: Record Number Of Wildfires In National Parks

Premier Kathleen Wynne Says Ontario Is Preparing Protocols For Physician-Assisted Death

Premier Kathleen Wynne Says Ontario Is Preparing Protocols For Physician-Assisted Death
The top court is holding an oral hearing today on the Trudeau government's request for a six-month extension to deal with the issue.

Premier Kathleen Wynne Says Ontario Is Preparing Protocols For Physician-Assisted Death

Somali-Canadian Woman Fights Revocation Of Security Clearance That Cost Her Airline Job

Somali-Canadian Woman Fights Revocation Of Security Clearance That Cost Her Airline Job
Ayaan Farah, 31, says Ottawa unfairly revoked her Transportation Security Clearance a year ago, leading to her firing from her full-time job of eight years.

Somali-Canadian Woman Fights Revocation Of Security Clearance That Cost Her Airline Job

Justin Trudeau Makes The Tabloids For His Family Vacation On Small Caribbean Island

Justin  Trudeau Makes The Tabloids For His Family Vacation On Small Caribbean Island
The visit to Nevis, a small island that is part of the twin-island Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis, was billed as a private family vacation, but it has become fodder for celebrity gossip website TMZ.

Justin Trudeau Makes The Tabloids For His Family Vacation On Small Caribbean Island