"A Study of the Learning Preferences of Four Remote Communities in Northern Alberta"

Due to a shortage of funds for the Learning Communities Project, I presented alone. The PowerPoint slides used for the presentation are sent under separate cover. The session was attended by about 25 people, and there was discussion both within the session and afterward. I was especially pleased tha...

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Main Author: Fahy, Patrick J.
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2149/2048
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spelling ftathabasuniv:oai:auspace.athabascau.ca:2149/2048 2024-09-30T14:35:09+00:00 "A Study of the Learning Preferences of Four Remote Communities in Northern Alberta" Fahy, Patrick J. 2009-05-14T15:35:48Z application/vnd.ms-powerpoint http://hdl.handle.net/2149/2048 en eng 92.927.G1119; http://hdl.handle.net/2149/2048 Northern Alberta learning preferences post-secondary training Wabasca education opportunities Presentation 2009 ftathabasuniv 2024-09-11T03:03:22Z Due to a shortage of funds for the Learning Communities Project, I presented alone. The PowerPoint slides used for the presentation are sent under separate cover. The session was attended by about 25 people, and there was discussion both within the session and afterward. I was especially pleased that two individuals from Matawa First Nations Management, Thunder Bay Ont., gave me their cards (Stephen Chase, and Murray Waboose), so that we might interact further on our results, and a program they are commencing in the fall. I felt the session went very well. A keynote speaker had touched on the issues of access and the roles of technologies. I was able to relate our findings to these. I was also able to explain how the LCP relates to Athabasca University’s central mandate, and future programming foci. Abstract The western Canadian province of Alberta has used the proceeds from exploitaiton of its extraordinary natural resources to provide a range of post-secondary training and education opportunities to residents. While these provisions appear comprehensive, this study examines how well they actually suit the express needs of the residents of remote, primarily Aboriginal, areas of the province. The literature shows that, while Aboriginals are underrepresented in Canada in university enrolments, they are no longer underrepresented in college or other institutions, suggesting that gains have been made in some aspects of Aboriginal educational and training participation. Further, when Aboriginals (especially males) complete advanced training, Statistics Canada reports they are highly successful in employment and income. Access is the privotal issue, however: leaving the local community to attend training programs elsewhere is often disruptive and unsuccessful. This study was conducted as part of Athabasca University’s Learning Communities Project, intended to provide information about the views of northern Alberta residents concerning their present post-secondary training and education opportunities. The study ... Conference Object First Nations Wabasca Athabasca University: AUSpace Canada Thunder Bay ENVELOPE(68.885,68.885,-49.325,-49.325) Wabasca ENVELOPE(-113.919,-113.919,55.987,55.987)
institution Open Polar
collection Athabasca University: AUSpace
op_collection_id ftathabasuniv
language English
topic Northern Alberta
learning preferences
post-secondary training
Wabasca
education opportunities
spellingShingle Northern Alberta
learning preferences
post-secondary training
Wabasca
education opportunities
Fahy, Patrick J.
"A Study of the Learning Preferences of Four Remote Communities in Northern Alberta"
topic_facet Northern Alberta
learning preferences
post-secondary training
Wabasca
education opportunities
description Due to a shortage of funds for the Learning Communities Project, I presented alone. The PowerPoint slides used for the presentation are sent under separate cover. The session was attended by about 25 people, and there was discussion both within the session and afterward. I was especially pleased that two individuals from Matawa First Nations Management, Thunder Bay Ont., gave me their cards (Stephen Chase, and Murray Waboose), so that we might interact further on our results, and a program they are commencing in the fall. I felt the session went very well. A keynote speaker had touched on the issues of access and the roles of technologies. I was able to relate our findings to these. I was also able to explain how the LCP relates to Athabasca University’s central mandate, and future programming foci. Abstract The western Canadian province of Alberta has used the proceeds from exploitaiton of its extraordinary natural resources to provide a range of post-secondary training and education opportunities to residents. While these provisions appear comprehensive, this study examines how well they actually suit the express needs of the residents of remote, primarily Aboriginal, areas of the province. The literature shows that, while Aboriginals are underrepresented in Canada in university enrolments, they are no longer underrepresented in college or other institutions, suggesting that gains have been made in some aspects of Aboriginal educational and training participation. Further, when Aboriginals (especially males) complete advanced training, Statistics Canada reports they are highly successful in employment and income. Access is the privotal issue, however: leaving the local community to attend training programs elsewhere is often disruptive and unsuccessful. This study was conducted as part of Athabasca University’s Learning Communities Project, intended to provide information about the views of northern Alberta residents concerning their present post-secondary training and education opportunities. The study ...
format Conference Object
author Fahy, Patrick J.
author_facet Fahy, Patrick J.
author_sort Fahy, Patrick J.
title "A Study of the Learning Preferences of Four Remote Communities in Northern Alberta"
title_short "A Study of the Learning Preferences of Four Remote Communities in Northern Alberta"
title_full "A Study of the Learning Preferences of Four Remote Communities in Northern Alberta"
title_fullStr "A Study of the Learning Preferences of Four Remote Communities in Northern Alberta"
title_full_unstemmed "A Study of the Learning Preferences of Four Remote Communities in Northern Alberta"
title_sort "a study of the learning preferences of four remote communities in northern alberta"
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2149/2048
long_lat ENVELOPE(68.885,68.885,-49.325,-49.325)
ENVELOPE(-113.919,-113.919,55.987,55.987)
geographic Canada
Thunder Bay
Wabasca
geographic_facet Canada
Thunder Bay
Wabasca
genre First Nations
Wabasca
genre_facet First Nations
Wabasca
op_relation 92.927.G1119;
http://hdl.handle.net/2149/2048
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