Tag Archives: inequity

MODULE 4 – ENTRY 5: Aboriginal Issues in Canada

This short video clip touches on some very informative statistics and data that show how the Indigenous children´s poverty compares to non-Indigenous children, how the income gap is 30% lower for Aboriginal people in Canada, how 1 in 4 children in poverty are of an Indigenous background, how 73% of the First Nations water systems are contaminated,  and overall how the poor socio-economic status of the First Nations people affect their everyday life, with very little to no funding nor aid by the government.  It includes various comparison charts to show the differences between the Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples of Canada.

Public Domain photo by DMCA

 Reference:

Varga, Ethan. (January 21, 2015). Aboriginal Issues in Canada.  Retrieved on July 10, 2021 from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WGqtcnqRRNY

MODULE 2 – Entry 2:  Seeds of Promise: Grandview/?Uuqinak’uuh* School in Vancouver

 

Public Domain photo taken by Amanda Mills

This site is linked to my final assignment as are the entries I will continue to share in our UBC Blogs. It is a community story regarding the issue of poverty and how teachers in a local school are still to this day very committed to advocate for better conditions for the Indigenous children and their families in the city of Vancouver east end. This is an area that tends to be avoided for decades, due to the area being synonymous with crime, poverty and despair. In one corner of the district, however to this day, there are determined group of educators, children, parents and volunteers who continue to create a garden oasis for play and learning in what has always been a gathering place for people in the drug, crime and sex trades. The children of Grandview/ ?Uuqinak’uuh Elementary School now have access to a playground complete with food, flower and butterfly gardens, stands of maple trees and a Coast Salish longhouse.  Since the 1970s to today, some good changes, like having committed advocates for Indigenous children and their families continue.  After almost 50 years of observations from my own mother, who was a teacher in this exact area, and almost 40 years myself, we can still see that the inequity issues, like poverty, are affecting the Indigenous peoples in our local community. The key question is whether Canadians are willing to understand and address the issues of poverty?

 

Reference:

Caledon Institute of Social Policy. (January 25, 2000). Seeds of Promise: Grandview/?Uuqinak’uuh* School in Vancouver. [Site]. Retrieved May 18, 2021,  https://maytree.com/wp-content/uploads/223ENG.pdf