Saturday, December 20, 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

BC Swing Band Leader Dal Richards Dies At 97, Missing 80th Consecutive New Year's Show

BC Swing Band Leader Dal Richards Dies At 97, Missing 80th Consecutive New Year's Show
A man who helped Vancouverites bring in the New Year for decades died just minutes before the stroke of midnight on New Year's Eve.

BC Swing Band Leader Dal Richards Dies At 97, Missing 80th Consecutive New Year's Show

Mining Magnate Peter Munk Admits To Donating More Than Legal Limit To Conservatives

Mining Magnate Peter Munk Admits To Donating More Than Legal Limit To Conservatives
Munk, the founder of mining giant Barrick Gold Corp., signed a compliance agreement with Elections Canada earlier this month, acknowledging that in 2008, 2010 and 2012 his donations exceeded the maximum allowable contributions in those years.

Mining Magnate Peter Munk Admits To Donating More Than Legal Limit To Conservatives

Former Crown Prosecutor To Probe Police Handling Of Richard Oland Murder

Former Crown Prosecutor To Probe Police Handling Of Richard Oland Murder
The review was announced days after a jury found Dennis Oland guilty in the death of his father, whose body was found in his Saint John office in July 2011.

Former Crown Prosecutor To Probe Police Handling Of Richard Oland Murder

Bulk Carrier From Marshall Islands Is The First Ship To Reach Montreal In 2016

Bulk Carrier From Marshall Islands Is The First Ship To Reach Montreal In 2016
The Vigorous left from Sohar, Oman, on Nov. 30 and crossed the Montreal port's downstream limits at 5:21 Friday morning.

Bulk Carrier From Marshall Islands Is The First Ship To Reach Montreal In 2016

How Response To Syrian Refugee Crisis Went From 10k In Three Years To Months

How Response To Syrian Refugee Crisis Went From 10k In Three Years To Months
When the Conservative government promised, in January 2015, to resettle 10,000 Syrian refugees over three years, Liberal MP John McCallum didn't buy it.

How Response To Syrian Refugee Crisis Went From 10k In Three Years To Months

Woman Critically Injured Defending Toddler In Second B.C. Dog Attack Within Week

Woman Critically Injured Defending Toddler In Second B.C. Dog Attack Within Week
Officers in Richmond, B.C., responded Wednesday afternoon to multiple reports of a 21-year-old woman covered in blood, fending off a large Rottweiler cross on an outdoor field. Police had previously identified the animal as a Rottweiler-pit bull cross.

Woman Critically Injured Defending Toddler In Second B.C. Dog Attack Within Week