New school opens in Pikangikum First Nation nearly a decade after old one burned down
Jody Porter | CBC News | Posted: October 13, 2016 10:00 AM | Last Updated: October 14, 2016
Remote community's only school burned down in 2007, students learning in portables since then
Kids in a remote First Nation in northern Ontario are attending classes in a proper school building for the first time in nearly a decade.
The Minister of Indigenous Affairs visited the Eenchokay Birchstick, kindergarten to Grade 12 school, in Pikangikum First Nation on Wednesday.
The community's previous school burned down in 2007. Since then, the approximately 900 school-aged children in Pikangikum were attending classes in a series of portables.
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"It's really fun being in the new school after being in portables," said Lily Kejick, 16. "It's just really hard being in portables, but since we're in the new school, everything is going great. It's so awesome."
The Grade 10 student says gym and music are her favourite classes and she'd like to become a music teacher after she graduates.
Kejick also takes part in a special program at the school called Project Journey. It's funded by the federal government and supported by Pikangikum First Nation and the Ontario Provincial Police to provide youth in the community with cultural activities such as canoeing, drumming and hunting.
"I really wanted to help out my community and it just brings happiness to me to see other people getting together," Kejick said.
Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett praised Project Journey and said she wants to focus federal investments in community-based, on-the-land education.
"You learn physics by trying to get your canoe to go ahead in the wind; you learn chemistry by using the chemicals in the brain to tan the deer hide; you learn biology by cleaning a fish — these are real teachings," Bennett said.
Bennett acknowledges that the per student, per year funding for First Nations students falls short of what some provinces spend, but she said change must be about more than dollars and cents.
She told First Nations leaders in northern Ontario that she wants to "decolonize" education and encouraged them to come up with their own systems of education, what she called an "Indigenous pedagogy."