May 23, 2003
Nunavut teacher honoured by prime minister
High school teacher
from Kimmirut one of 16 Canadians to receive award
CHARLOTTE PETRIE
Kimmirut high school teacher Pascale Baillargeon, centre, was presented with
a Prime Minister's Award for Teaching at a recent celebration in Ottawa. Nunavut
MP Nancy Karetak-Lindell, right, and Loolie Padluq were at Baillargeon's side
during the ceremony. (PHOTO COURTESY OF PASCALE BAILLARGEON)
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Pascale Baillargeon is an educator, a muse and maybe even a miracle-worker.
She's also the recipient of the Prime Minister's Award for Teaching.
A native of Quebec City, Baillargeon has been teaching in Kimmirut for 10 years.
She spearheaded the creation of a Grade 10 program in 1993 to be implemented
in all Nunavut communities back when many students from outlying areas came
to Iqaluit for high school.
It was an initiative in the early 1990s to move away from the residential model.
But as if that weren't challenging enough, she took the task one step further.
She expanded her work on a Grade 10 program to include an overall program for
high schools in every community across Nunavut.
"I took a very strong interest in developing a high school program involving
the community in the high school and the high school in the community,"
Baillargeon explained.
Building bridges between the community and the school is an objective she has
kept for 10 years while wearing a variety of teaching hats at Qaqqalik School.
"With all the transition Nunavut has experienced, I've had great opportunities
to work on a variety of committees and with a variety of really good educators,"
she said.
Integrating a high school program into the smaller communities involved more
than developing courses. The teenagers themselves had to be integrated into
the community because they were sent to Iqaluit after Grade 9 to return only
during holidays.
"In 1993 the community did not have teenagers. So what do they do after
school if there is nothing for them?" Baillargeon asked.
"With the issues we had to face, we realized very quickly that it wasn't
just a classroom issue. A lot of the things we were dealing with in the class
came from community situations or a lack of understanding of what is a high
school."
Parents also struggled, Baillargeon explained, because they weren't used to
having teenagers in their homes. An understanding of what it means to have a
high school in the community and a need for recreational and cultural programs
had to be addressed.
Another obstacle Baillargeon overcame was supporting Inuit educators whose
previous experience was teaching primary school.
But the biggest adaptation was how to involve teenagers in their community
year-round, Baillargeon admitted. Many communities today continue to face some
of these challenges, such as a lack of jobs, recreational activities and youth
committees.
The recent awards ceremony held in Ottawa praised Baillargeon for her leadership
qualities, and recognized the energetic teacher for her innovative teaching
techniques.
With a background in outdoor education, Baillargeon advocates a hands-on, flexible
approach to teaching. She has been involved in many trips out on the land with
her students, who she says have taught her so much.
And a few years back she led a classroom of fine arts students in the business
of making and selling t-shirts through her printmaking classes. Their work attracted
the attention of a vendor at Pearson International Airport in Toronto, who signed
on to sell the shirts in his gift shop.
The expectant mother is winding down for her second child, but that didn't
stop her from taking in the lavish festivities which were bestowed on her and
15 other recipients at the gala awards ceremony on Parliament Hill May 15.
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