Youth culture
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Private French school to make the grade in Winnipeg this fall
4 minute read Monday, Mar. 2, 2026A francophone couple has founded a first-of-its-kind private school in Manitoba as demand for French education hits record levels.
Last spring forward for B.C. as it moves to permanent daylight time
6 minute read Preview Tuesday, Mar. 3, 2026Drumming program connects Southeast Asian students with traditional instrument, heritage
5 minute read Preview Monday, Mar. 2, 2026Solomon to meet OpenAI CEO Altman in wake of mass killings in Tumbler Ridge, B.C.
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026AI in the classroom — approach with caution
5 minute read Friday, Feb. 27, 2026Teachers and administrators have always been quick to jump on the latest bandwagon because they think that makes them good educators.
Unfortunately, it doesn’t because they often adopt strategies that are quickly proven to be wrong or worse proven to be detrimental to their students. If anyone dares to point out the lack of evidence for the use of the latest gimmick — ChatGPT in the classroom — they are discredited and told that they are not open to new ideas.
I am always skeptical of people like Sinead Bovell who came to speak to educators at the invitation of the Manitoba government at an “AI in education” summit. Her directive was to provide her predications about the future of technology in education. I did not attend this conference but based on what Maggie Macintosh reported in her Free Press article (Future students will be wired differently, thanks to AI, Jan. 16) Bovell told educators that they have to prepare for a future that will include technology in the classroom. The classrooms of today already have more than enough technology in them, so it appears what she was in fact promoting was the use of ChatGPT and other similar AI programs.
Bovell stated that no one knows what the future will look like and in that she is correct.
Young woman says she was on social media ‘all day long’ as a child in landmark addiction trial
7 minute read Preview Wednesday, Mar. 4, 2026Winnipeg School Division proposes 9.3 per cent tax increase
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026AI chatbots and teens — a sometimes deadly combination
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026Generalizations and facts
4 minute read Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026Recently, I ran across a social media post with 100,000 followers which stated that “the media is the communist arm of the government.”
At first blush, it is easy to write off an outlandish comment like this as a function of a neurodegenerative illness or a psychological disorder.
Certainly, as a middle-of-the-road regular contributor to articles on the Think Tank page, I have never thought of myself as a communist. Truth be told, the Free Press neither offers me direction about what I write, nor do they pay me for my op-ed pieces. A post like this also does a grave disservice to the many dedicated journalists who ply their trade according to strict ethical guidelines.
At the same time, however, I realize that there are people who don’t read the Free Press because they believe that the mainstream media (MSM) have been co-opted and corrupted by government subsidies.
Belated Lunar New Year party a feast of Korean culture
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026Eby says it looks like OpenAI could have prevented ‘horrific’ Tumbler Ridge killings
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026She woke up to ‘We’re at war’ in Ukraine. Now Mariia Vainshtein is a New York City tennis champion
7 minute read Preview Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026Manitoba’s top tabby clawing for title of North America’s favourite pet
4 minute read Preview Monday, Feb. 23, 2026Schools’ internet use spikes as students, teachers pull for Canadian — and local — athletes
4 minute read Preview Friday, Feb. 20, 2026OpenAI contacted RCMP about Tumbler Ridge shooter’s ChatGPT account after attack
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026Province, treaty commission develop new Grade 12 course
4 minute read Preview Friday, Feb. 20, 2026Social media companies face legal reckoning over mental health harms to children
7 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 25, 20267-Eleven Canada looks to franchising, restaurant model and egg sandwiches for growth
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026Fossilized vomit provides insight on predator that lived 290 million years ago
2 minute read Preview Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026City library visits up 28 per cent from 2022
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026New report says youth should help guide Ottawa’s campaign against online exploitation
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026McDonald’s Canada launches late-night meal collab with Drake brand OVO
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026Making the most of Winnipeg’s biggest opportunity
6 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026Maintenance isn’t enough — we have to build
5 minute read Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026For the third year in a row, the atmosphere in Manitoba’s staffrooms during the provincial school funding announcement has been one of cautious relief rather than the dread we came to expect for a decade.
As a high school teacher-librarian and a parent with a child in the public system, I want to begin by acknowledging the progress made.
After the lean, adversarial years of the Brian Pallister and Heather Stefanson governments, years defined by the looming threat of Bill 64 and funding increases that didn’t even cover the cost of a box of pencils, the current NDP government has chosen a different path.
This $79.8-million injection for the 2026-27 school year, building on the $104-million and $67-million investments of the previous two years, represents nearly a quarter-billion-dollar shift in how we value our children’s future. For the nutrition programs, the salary harmonization, and the simple act of treating educators as partners rather than enemies: thank you.