May 7, 2004
A day of joy for Sanikiluaq
"We comforted each
other and helped each other."
JANE GEORGE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Grads Lucy Mary Qavvik,
Isabel Takatak, Caroline Alariak, Mina Rumbolt, Mary Kavik, Dina Kavik and Lizzie
Kavik clapped for joy after receiving their diplomas. (PHOTOS BY JANE GEORGE)
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Four years of work paid off last Friday when seven women from Sanikiluaq became
full-fledged teachers.
To a bilingual recording of "We are the world," Lucy Mary Qavvik,
Isabel Takatak, Caroline Alariak, Mina Rumbolt, Mary Kavik, Dina Kavik and Lizzie
Kavik, all wearing caps and gowns, proceeded to the stage at the school gym
with Premier Paul Okalik, Education Minister Ed Picco and various Nunavut educators,
as their friends and families looked on.
In the front row were Mina Rumbolt's sister, her husband and her son, each
armed with cameras to record the ceremony.
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Elder Louisa Ippak
expertly tends the qulliq as her daughter, Mina, prepares to graduate from the
Nunavut Teachers Education Program.
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Meanwhile, Mina's mother, elder Louisa Ippak, tended to a qulliq.
"Graduation Day is a day of joy, a time to honor our students," said
Annie Appaqaq Sr., the president of the local district education authority.
The women were there to receive Bachelors of Education degrees, earned through
the Nunavut Teacher Education Program.
NTEP, in partnership with McGill University, offers a community-based program
that prepares Inuit to become teachers in Nunavut schools.
NTEP offers two programs, a three-year Teaching Diploma and the four-year Bachelor
of Education Degree. Currently, these programs are being offered in Taloyoak,
Clyde River and Arviat.
The programs' emphasis is on training primary and elementary teachers, with
the focus on practice, and the theory learned in courses is quickly put to use
in the classroom.
Picco reminded those assembled that since 1979, NTEP has produced 200 teachers,
105 with bachelors' degrees, and has been "a tremendous success."
Although the training was offered in Sanikiluaq, studying for years wasn't
easy, the two class valedictorians said.
"It seemed like it went on forever," Lucy Mary Qavvik and Isabel
Takatak said.
The four years were marked by a lack of money, technical problems with computers,
homework demands and personal problems.
"We comforted each other and helped each other."
Elders offered support, traditional knowledge and courage.
"We want to be role models - the best teachers we can be," the two
said.
Valentina de Krom from McGill encouraged all the new graduates to set new challenging
goals, and consider further advanced study towards a master's degree or a doctorate
in education.
NTEP teacher Noel McDermott, speaking in Inuktitut and English, underlined
the importance of using Inuktitut.
"This is a difficult time for Inuit. There is pressure on all sides for
students to use English," he said. "There is so much wrong if Inuktitut
isn't used at home and at school. I believe that children should be taught and
learn in their own language."
Mary Kavik received the Rebecca Idlout Memorial Award for her academic excellence,
while Dina Kavik received the NTEP leadership award for her leadership skills.
Then, with diplomas and flowers in hand, the graduates posed for photos and
shook hands with everyone present.
After the graduation ceremony, the entire community gathered in the arena for
a lavish country foods feast featuring caribou, seal, char, shrimp, mussels
and sea urchins as well as bannock and cake.
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Later, everyone gathered in the arena for a community feast of country foods.
Smiling in her new McGill T-shirt, grinning grad Isabel handed out mugs with
the STEP logo for the Sanikiluaq Teachers Education Program, a program which
the new teachers claimed for their own and renamed.
Next year, Isabel, along with her fellow grads, plans to start her career as
a teacher at Nuiyak School.
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