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June 6, 2003
One click at a time
Travelling computer
course a big hit with Kangiqsualujjuarmiut
ODILE
NELSON
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Joe Etok of Kangiqsualujjuaq says Nunaviks travelling computer course
will help him get another job. (PHOTOS BY ODILE NELSON)
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Its a late May morning
and the last stop for this years traveling computer course. The sun is
out, the wind is warm and there are only four students in Gilles Beliveaus
morning class.
Its too nice
outside to be teaching a course, Beliveau says, his handlebar moustache
rising slightly as he smiles.
His own back is turned
squarely away from the classroom window.
Beliveau doesnt take
the small turnout to heart. Today there may be less than a handful of students
but just after Christmas, he taught the course in Kangiqsujuaq and 28 students
showed up not bad for a community of 500. During his last session in
Kuujjuaq, he taught 50 students.
The Kativik School Board
began the itinerant adult computer course in 2000 and for Beliveau, who has
been with the program since it began, the courses goal is clear.
What I like is that
people can open themselves up to what a computer can do for them, the tools
they can find and the jobs they can find, or it can help them in the jobs they
have right now, he says.
Each year, Beliveau and
his colleague, Jocelyn Gagnon, divide Nunaviks communities into two regions
and then spend about two weeks in each village, teaching such basics as how
computer equipment works, software programs like Microsoft Office, and, of course,
how to use the Internet.
If participants share the
same knowledge level, instructors teach the course using an overhead projector,
but otherwise a CD-ROM program allows students to learn at their own pace.
The four students here
today are all at their own skill levels. They also all have their own reasons
for being here.
Kitty
Annanack of the Kangiqsualujjuaq social services centre, says Gilles Beliveaus
travelling computer class is important and helpful.
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Kitty Annanack, a co-ordinator
with the Kangiqsualujjuaq social services centre, is attending her fourth class
with Beliveau to improve her computer skills at work.
She readily admits that
she used to be very skeptical of what computers could add to her community.
At first, I was against
computers when they first introduced them here, but I realize now how important
it is and how helpful, she says.
For Joe Etok, the course
may improve his chance to land a job.
Before taking the course
he had some knowledge of Microsoft Word and how to use the Internet. He is now
learning office management programs.
I was laid off as
a mechanic for the CNV. Sometimes, in my job I have to order parts, he
said. This is going to improve my job [prospects].
Beliveau is obviously proud
when he hears his students speak positively about what they are learning and
he hopes to have even more students register with their local employment officers
next year.
He admits, however, that
the course has one unavoidable shortcoming most computer programs and
the Internet are not in Inuttitut.
And this, he says, limits
his students to those who have some understanding of French or English.
I have tried sometimes
to teach students who dont speak much English or French, but they quit
because the computer speaks English. Whatever you see is in English or French.
There is a program to type in Inuttitut, but to use e-mail, Hotmail, Yahoo or
whatever, you have to use fonts that they have. You could type an Inuttitut
message in an attachment and send it but thats about it. Its unfortunate,
he says.
The Inuit population is
simply too small for large computer companies to develop programs in Inuttitut,
he says.
But ultimately, Beliveau
thinks the course could help many Nunavimmiut given the need for trained
computer technicians in Nunaviks many communities.
I have one guy, a
former student from Wakeham Bay, he says, He registered with one
of the schools in Montreal. He finished in March this year and two weeks after,
the Kativik Regional Government hired him. For me, thats my best story.
A story that, for Believeau,
may even be worth missing a day or two of fine spring weather.
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