Bilingual education in Nunavut: Trojan horse or paper tiger?

On April 1 2009, Nunavut celebrated its tenth anniversary as Canada’s newest territory. Now halfway through the timeline set to fulfill its original goals, Nunavut is beginning to implement its new Education Act. This paper analyses education policy in the territory by specifically examining Berger’...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Andrew Peter Hodgkins
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
French
Published: Canadian Society for Studies in Education 2010
Subjects:
edu
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/8e0ae9bcc35e4c40ac8130d3bea43506
Description
Summary:On April 1 2009, Nunavut celebrated its tenth anniversary as Canada’s newest territory. Now halfway through the timeline set to fulfill its original goals, Nunavut is beginning to implement its new Education Act. This paper analyses education policy in the territory by specifically examining Berger’s (2006) influential report, The Nunavut Project, which forms a basis for the new Education Act. Berger promoted the idea that achieving bilingual education in the K-12 system is required in order to improve graduation rates and increase Inuit participation in the wage economy. The paper provides both critical insights into Nunavut’s struggles for self-determination, and a case study for other regions currently engaged in the arduous path towards decolonisation.