Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s Lauds Jump In Aboriginal Graduation Rate, Still Trails National Average

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2015 01:45 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's government is celebrating record-high graduation rates for aboriginal students, but indigenous high-school completion levels, provincially and for the rest of Canada, still fall significantly short of the national average.
     
    The number of aboriginal students finishing secondary school in the province has increased steadily from about 54 to 63 per cent over the past six years, as indicated by data from B.C.'s Education Ministry.
     
    But that is still more than 20 percentage points shy of the 84-per-cent average for the general population in B.C.
     
    "Seeing any kind of increase in those numbers is of course very welcome," said Linc Kesler, a professor at the University of British Columbia and director of the school's First Nations House of Learning.
     
    Kesler predicted the upward trend will continue with further efforts to bridge the funding gap between aboriginal and non-aboriginal students and by increasing the amount of aboriginal content being taught in school.
     
    "The curriculum piece is really critical," he said.
     
    "Overcoming the silence and exclusion of aboriginal people in the way, for instance, Canadian history is taught ... is really important and I think has a really significant impact."
     
    Kesler pointed to a big push underway in the Prairie provinces to overhaul school curricula to include First Nations content.
     
    The word aboriginal is an all-encompassing term that includes First Nations, Metis and Inuit. There are about 1,175,000 aboriginals in Canada, of which about 700,000 identify as First Nations.
     
    A 2011 Assembly of First Nations report pegged the 2004-2009 First-Nations graduation rate at 36 per cent, compared to a Canadian average of 72 per cent over the same time period.
     
    The Canadian Press obtained a 2014 Manitoba government internal report earlier this year that noted the province had the lowest First Nations secondary-school graduation rate in the country at 28 per cent. However, a Statistics Canada publication from 2011 found 50 per cent of Manitoba's indigenous people between 25 and 64 have at least a high-school degree.
     
    A shifting culture is also having an impact on improved graduation rates, said Kesler, with more encouragement for aboriginal students to carry on to university or college.
     
    "There was once a time when ... there wasn't such an interest in seeing them graduate or proceed to post-secondary," he said. "People were being tracked out of academic courses with a fair degree of regularity."
     
    B.C.'s Education Minister Mike Bernier was unavailable for comment, but said in a statement that he's encouraged to see so many aboriginal students graduating at the same time.
     
    "There is still work to do so every aboriginal student has the skills they need to succeed in a changing world," said an additional statement from the ministry.
     
    University of Manitoba academic Frank Deer says there are still remote communities in the North that don't offer kindergarten to Grade 12 schools, and that graduation rates tend to be higher in southern Canada, closer to urban centres.
     
    Deer referenced a program that sees First Nations students in a Winnipeg school district placed in health-care work settings between Grades 9 to 12 in order to focus on the connection between education and a career.
     
    The retention rate for the initial group was an "amazing" 100 per cent, he said.
     
    "We're in an exciting era where many school districts, many provincial authorities, are beginning to engage in program development, engage in community supports," said Deer.
     
    "I do see the glass half full. In fact, better than that — I'm very encouraged for the future."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Soldier Suicide Recognition At DND An Uphill Battle, Says Victim's Mother

    Soldier Suicide Recognition At DND An Uphill Battle, Says Victim's Mother
    Sheila Fynes, whose son Cpl. Stuart Langridge died by his own hand in 2008, says she's been made cautiously optimistic by the promise, but the stigma of mental illness, which can lead to suicide, is still very much a part of the military mindset.

    Soldier Suicide Recognition At DND An Uphill Battle, Says Victim's Mother

    Day Parole Approved For Patrick Clayton Who Took Hostages In Edmonton WCB Office

    Day Parole Approved For Patrick Clayton Who Took Hostages In Edmonton WCB Office
    Day parole has been granted to an Alberta man who took nine people hostage at gunpoint in a Workers' Compensation Board office in downtown Edmonton.

    Day Parole Approved For Patrick Clayton Who Took Hostages In Edmonton WCB Office

    Cancer Fund Launched By Terminally Ill Boy's Family Who Had Christmas In October

    Cancer Fund Launched By Terminally Ill Boy's Family Who Had Christmas In October
    The family of a terminally ill seven-year-old boy whose small Ontario town threw him an early Christmas parade has launched a foundation to support brain cancer research.

    Cancer Fund Launched By Terminally Ill Boy's Family Who Had Christmas In October

    B.C., Developer And First Nation Partner On $1.5 Billion Expansion Plan For Ski Resort

    The province says it will collaborate with the Berezan Group and the local Sts'ailes Band to develop the Hemlock Resort into a tourist destination in the Fraser Valley.

    B.C., Developer And First Nation Partner On $1.5 Billion Expansion Plan For Ski Resort

    Leslie Black, Saskatchewan Man Pleaded Guilty To Burning Woman Now Wants To Withdraw Plea

    Leslie Black, Saskatchewan Man Pleaded Guilty To Burning Woman Now Wants To Withdraw Plea
    Leslie Black pleaded guilty in April to the attempted murder of Marlene Bird on June 1, 2014 in Prince Albert.

    Leslie Black, Saskatchewan Man Pleaded Guilty To Burning Woman Now Wants To Withdraw Plea

    Justin Trudeau, First Ministers, Scientists To Gather Nov. 23 To Talk Climate Change

    Justin Trudeau, First Ministers, Scientists To Gather Nov. 23 To Talk Climate Change
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he intends to meet with Canada's first ministers on Nov. 23 in advance of the climate-change conference in Paris.

    Justin Trudeau, First Ministers, Scientists To Gather Nov. 23 To Talk Climate Change