April 15, 2005
Exchange introduces
students to trees, maple syrup
Arviat and Quebec youth
find they have things in common
JANE
GEORGE
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Almost
as large as a muskox: the sight of barnyard cows was new to the group of students
who traveled to Quebec from Arviat. (PHOTOS COURTESY OF STANSTEAD COLLEGE)
|
Trees, mountains, swimming
pools, cows, skiing, maple syrup and pizza: these are among the many new sights,
activities and tastes which impressed a group of students from Arviat who visited
Quebec's Eastern Townships in March.
Not to mention school uniforms
and a school day that starts up promptly at 8 a.m.
Rob Davies, who taught
at Arviat's Qitiqliq School from 1999 to 2003, organized the exchange with his
fiancée Anne Guyatt, who is still teaching in the community.
Davies now teaches at Stanstead
College, a private day and boarding school in Stanstead, Que., about 200 kilometres
east of Montreal in the
heart of a rural area that
straddles the United States border.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Anne
Rose Aulatjut and Dorothy Anoee throatsing for a local radio broadcast in the
Eastern Townships
|
Ten students - Amber Tagalik,
Dorothy Anoee, Arnold Anoee, Margaret Akatsiak, Malachi Mamgark, Ashton Kablutsiak,
Peter Koomak, Billy Joe Kaayak, Anne Rose Aulatjut, Billy Ollie - and two teachers,
Guyatt and Marvin McKay Keenan, went to Stanstead from Arviat.
"It went off without
a single glitch," says Davies.
That is, apart from bad
weather, which postponed the students' departure from Arviat and their arrival
in Quebec by three days.
The travel costs for the
exchange are covered by the YMCA and Heritage Canada, including airfare for
10 students and two teacher chaperones from Arviat and for 10 students and two
teachers from
Quebec to travel to Arviat
next month.
Guyatt, who teaches physical
education in Arviat, selected students for the exchange on the strength of their
interest and willingness to prepare for the trip as well as on their athletic
skills.
All but one of the students
was under 15. For two, it was their first trip outside of the North.
Arnold
Anoee gives the entire exchange experience a thumbs-up.
|
"It was different,
but it was fun," says Dorothy Anoee.
The Arviat students reacted
with shock when they first arrived in the Eastern Townships - but they soon
found their bearings in a very different-looking world, say Davies and Guyatt.
The differences between
Qitiqliq School and Stanstead College are as striking as those in the surrounding
scenery.
Stanstead College is known
as a tough preparatory school, where students wear uniforms during a school
day that's crammed with classes and after-school sports and activities.
"The school is much
more rigorous. Things start at eight in the morning - not at nine-ish,"
says Davies.
Although many students
qualify for financial aid, Stanstead College's education doesn't come cheap,
either, with tuition for boarding students above $20,000 a year. The school
also has a diverse student body, with many international students - unlike Arviat,
where all but two students at the local high school are Inuit.
Despite these many differences,
the mixed group of students from Stanstead and Arviat communicated well.
"It was neat to see
how they opened up," Davies says.
During their week-long
visit, the group from Arviat spent most days sightseeing and visiting local
sites of interest, such as a real sugar shack, where maple syrup is boiled down
from tree sap (a southern Quebec tradition in spring) and a popular ski hill.
At Mt. Orford, the Arviat
students took downhill ski lessons and, despite their initial fears, immediately
headed for the slopes.
"It was my first experience.
I was excited," says Amber Tagalik. "It was really fun."
One girl ended taking the
ski lift up the mountain and skiing the whole way down. All received a medal
for their efforts.
The Arviat students also
spent time on the Stanstead College campus. During the school's science fair,
they ran a display on traditional Inuit games. The group also demonstrated eight
games, and three of the girls performed throat-singing for the entire school
- a new skill they had learned only in the months leading up to the trip.
For a day, the Arviat group
went to classes at Stanstead College, wearing the school uniform, with its blazers
and ties.
Lindsay Smith hosted Anne
Rose Aulatjut at her home. Anne Rose also accompanied Lindsay to school for
a day, but, according to Lindsay, she wasn't overly keen about the experience.
"She went to four
of my classes," says Lindsay. "But they're classes nobody likes."
According to one student
from Stanstead, the only thing everyone had in common at the start of the exchange
program was the style of their clothes, but by the end of the week, the two
groups of students bonded, say organizers.
"When we left Stanstead,
one girl was crying. She didn't want to go. When they first got there, they
wanted to go home, but by the last day, they didn't want to leave," Guyatt
says.
The exchange, she says,
is all about making the kind of positive connections between youth that will
last a lifetime.
The students from Stanstead
College are to arrive in Arviat on May 19. There, they'll sample ice fishing,
camping and riding on a skidoo. The girls will be invited to make a pair of
mitts and everyone will be able to use the equipment in the school's workshop
to make their own personal souvenir of either an ulu or snow knife. A day attending
classes is also on the schedule in Arviat.
"I'm really looking
forward to experience a different way of living and culture. But it's probably
going to be a little easier for us to go to Arviat because we already know them,"
says Stanstead College student Jeffrey Cowen.
TOP
|