A plan to find, help MIA students North End coalition program to deliver culturally sensitive education, supports to 'inactive' Winnipeg School Division kids

An average 400 Grade 7-12 students in the North End have been reported “inactive” during the school year for the last decade.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 25/11/2020 (1449 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

An average 400 Grade 7-12 students in the North End have been reported “inactive” during the school year for the last decade.

Despite being registered in the Winnipeg School Division, they are not actively participating at their home school and their families have not reported a move.

The WSD data (from 2009 to 2019) obtained by the Community Education Development Association indicates hundreds of students stop attending class at some point after Sept. 30, the annual head-count day in Manitoba, in any given year.

“We know the COVID pandemic has created even more stress on North End students and that more students are disengaging from school, so this is a challenge that’s just going to get further exacerbated,” said Tom Simms, co-director of CEDA.

MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Tom Simms, co-director of CEDA
MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Tom Simms, co-director of CEDA

Keeping students “active” in the public education system is the motivation behind a new collaborative project between CEDA, Ndinawemaaganag Endaawaad Inc. and Ma Mawi Wi Chi Itata Centre.

Together, the partners have founded Indigenous Education Caring Society — a non-profit charitable organization that will offer students a culturally sensitive alternative to standard middle and high schools in the division.

The organizations have secured a $500,000 capital grant from the Winnipeg Foundation, as well as support from the Thomas Sill Foundation, to launch off-campus learning environments with built-in access to community support services for students in the North End.

Students will be able to access both academic lessons and resources to find stable housing if their families require it, as well as leadership opportunities in the community.

Daniel Crump / Winnipeg Free Press
Kayla Stubbs, interim executive director at Ndinawe, said her hope for the project is that it will provide Indigenous youth with equal access to education, teachers and programs that will help them thrive.
Daniel Crump / Winnipeg Free Press Kayla Stubbs, interim executive director at Ndinawe, said her hope for the project is that it will provide Indigenous youth with equal access to education, teachers and programs that will help them thrive.

Kayla Stubbs, interim executive director at Ndinawe, said her hope for the project is that it will provide Indigenous youth with “equal access to education, teachers and programs that will help them thrive.”

“Community-based programming provides a unique opportunity to utilize Indigenous lenses in developing effective tools for community youth to succeed,” Stubbs wrote in a statement to the Free Press Thursday.

After surveying the North End for facilities and learning many buildings are in disrepair, Simms said the most cost-effective option is to build two campuses — with the hopes of expanding in the future — from the ground up.

Vacant lots on Selkirk Avenue and Arlington, Salter and McGregor streets are being eyed as possible sites.

Meantime, the IECS is trying to secure an agreement to have the division rent classroom space and staff it with program teachers, who will be employed by WSD.

The funding the division collects annually for students who become inactive should be redirected, Simms said, adding, “the basis of the proposal is to have the funding for the student follow the student.”

“We know the COVID pandemic has created even more stress on North End students and that more students are disengaging from school, so this is a challenge that’s just going to get further exacerbated.” – Tom Simms, co-director of CEDA

The official definition of an inactive student is a pupil in Grade 7-12 who has left WSD between Oct. 1 and May 31 inclusive, and for whom there is no record of re-entry in any area school in the current year.

The purpose of collecting the counts is to provide a baseline of withdrawals, but the division cautions the numbers should not be viewed as exact records because they do not account for students who have registered in other divisions.

Directors in charge of the WSD programs were not available for comment Thursday.

In a statement, division spokeswoman Radean Carter said WSD administrators look for “all sorts of ways” to encourage students to return to their learning and re-engage them in school.

“Our partnerships with CEDA and off-campus programs have been among the successful ways that this has been achieved,” Carter said.

The division currently has 13 off-campus programs. Among them, the North District Off-Campus Program, administered through Isaac Newton School, which serves Grades 7-9 students who are disengaged from traditional schooling.

Simms praised the division for its openness to the project, as well as the fact it collects data on inactive students. Schools alone can’t fix inactivity, he said, “there needs to be partnerships.”

The IECS programs are expected to launch sometime in the 2021-22 academic year.

 

maggie.macintosh@freepress.mb.ca

Twitter: @macintoshmaggie

Maggie Macintosh

Maggie Macintosh
Reporter

Maggie Macintosh reports on education for the Winnipeg Free Press. Funding for the Free Press education reporter comes from the Government of Canada through the Local Journalism Initiative.

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