April 12, 2002
Rebuilding Kiilinik
With its modern architecture
and glass walls, Cambridge Bays new high school is a tower over the ashes
of the old one
DENISE
RIDEOUT
Nunatsiaq News
Three and a half years
after disaster struck Kiilinik High School in Cambridge Bay, staff and students
once again have a real high school to call their own.
The school burned to the
ground in August 1998 after teenagers started a fire under the building. And
since then, teachers have been holding classes in tiny yellow portable classrooms.
But a rebuilt Kiilinik
High School opened for classes just two months ago, on Feb. 19. The grey, dome-shaped
building sits near the spot of the original Kiilinik High School.
"It was hard,"
recalls principal, Judy Cherniak. "There were three or four of us in town
at the time of the fire. It was in the summer and many teachers were out of
town. But I was here."
When students and teachers
headed back to school in September 1998, things were challenging, to say the
least. Old government-owned warehouses and two portables, located near the burned
down school, were transformed into classrooms.
The buildings were far
apart, and students had to bundle up and walk from one to another when they
changed classes. In addition, they were cramped, old and poorly heated.
Now, with classrooms, science
labs, a gymnasium, a wood workshop and teachers offices under one roof
again, gone are the days of trekking through snow to get from class to class.
And for teacher Julia Ogina,
it means she can now use her sled solely for sliding.
"I had to carry my
supplies from classroom to classroom. I had six or seven canvas bags filled
with all the resources and materials I needed. Id put them on a sled and
pull them from portable to portable," says Ogina, who teaches culture and
language.
"We tried to keep
the feeling of a school alive," says principal Cherniak. "Sometimes
it was challenging."
"A bit of a Disneyland"
The school, with its high
ceilings and classrooms with windows for walls, has an open, inviting feel to
it. "It feels a lot bigger than it actually is," says Cherniak, looking
up toward the ceiling.
On this Friday morning,
a group of students are lounging around on a stage, taking a quick break between
classes. The stage, located in the lobby, is what Cherniak calls the "viewing
area." Its a fitting name, given that the 10 windows that line the
wall above it give sports fans a prime view into the gymnasium.
The gym is an accomplishment
in itself.
Initially, the construction
budget didnt include a gymnasium. But the community jumped into action,
holding every fundraising event imaginable to pay for the gym. Senior high teacher
Patti Bligh took out her scissors and clippers and cut residents hair
at $5 a pop a surefire way to raise money considering the community doesnt
have any hair salons.
After two years of fundraising,
Cambridge Bay was able to chip in $70,000 toward the gyms construction.
Its now a school gym by day, a community gym by night.
Back in the lobby, across
form the viewing area, is the culture and language classroom where four students
are sewing kamiit. The rooms walls glass panels that run from floor
to ceiling allow passersby to watch the students at their handiwork.
"Each classroom has
its own shape, which is kind of fun," Cherniak says. "The use
of the glass, besides giving the classes an open feeling, gives teachers an
opportunity to keep an eye on students who are out here," she says, standing
outside one of the classrooms looking in.
Further down the hall,
an entire section is devoted to giving students hands-on skills in art, cooking
and wood working. Cooking classes are held in a large room with two kitchens
complete with ovens, fridges and cupboards full of baking utensils.
Next door, in the workshop,
a new course on stained glass is in the works. Jack Kupeuna, 17, solders two
pieces of rose-colored glass. The shop, cluttered with tool boxes, drills, saws
and various mechanical gadgets, smells like freshly sawed wood.
Its a shop teachers
paradise. Before moving into the new school, the shop classes were run out of
a small garage. "This is about the size of a four-door garage," brags
Dan Wilmot, the shop teacher. "This whole school is a bit of a Disneyland,"
he jokes, "with its new gym, new shop and new classrooms."
Kiilinik High also boasts
two computer labs, a science lab with a greenhouse and a hangout area for senior
high students, located in a small section on the second floor.
While its got the
fun-shaped classrooms and extra amenities, the school is lacking something critical
a guidance counsellor. The Nunavut governments budget for the school
didnt allow for extras, like a counsellor.
"We needed a counsellor
desperately, but that would mean taking away a teacher," principal Cherniak
says. "We try to use community resources as much as possible." As
she speaks, a woman in a classroom in front of her teaches students about anger
management. The hamlets community wellness program applied for funding
to bring the anger management instructor to Cambridge Bay for five days, and
the school chipped in the rest of the cost. While it doesnt make up for
a full-time guidance counselor, its a help, Cherniak says.
The lunch bell rings at
noon and students mill about the locker area. For Grade 11 student Jason Akoluk,
the lockers are the best part of the new school. Lisa Bacheillier, whos
graduating this year, says theres a fun atmosphere in the new building.
The students have their very own bulletin board, where messages such as "People
be cool, come to my house after school" are posted.
"This place is more
spread out," Bacheillier says. "The other classrooms were small and
didnt feel very comfortable. This is very big and bright."
|