July 19, 2002
Capital citys first
bilingual preschool to open this fall
Teachers studying early
childhood courses to prepare for first day of school
DENISE
RIDEOUT
Malayah Tagak
(left) and Daniel Joseph Johnson play in the family resource centre, where an
Inuktitut-English preschool program will be held this fall.
(PHOTO BY DENISE RIDEOUT)
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Sitting on a colourful
rug in a room full of building blocks, stuffed toys and colouring books, Geela
Tagak plays with her two-year-old daughter Alannah, all the while telling her
how to play the game.
Her instructions to Allanah
are all in Inuktitut.
Come this fall, Tagaks
gentle way of teaching will be put to good use. She will be the Inuktitut teacher
at a new preschool program the first of its kind in Iqaluit.
The program, aimed at teaching
four-year-olds the skills they need to enter kindergarten, will begin in September.
The new program is bilingual,
with Tagak teaching the children Inuktitut two days a week and Sonja Meredith
heading up the English classes.
"I will read books
in Inuktitut and they will have booklets to take home," Tagak says. "And
they will do colouring of igloos and qamotiit."
The preschool program is
the brainchild of a local society, Tasiuqtigiit, made up of parents and community
members who want to put together wellness and education programs for children.
The societys name,
"Tasiuqtigiit Hand-in-Hand Main dans la Main, is trilingual
to reflect Iqaluits multicultural make-up. Three of the societys
five board members are Inuit.
Last September, the society
hired Norma Jean Johnson to be its executive director and to develop a new childhood
education program. When she came to Iqaluit, she was struck by the absence of
a preschool program.
After working on educational
programs for children for 18 years in southern Canada, Johnson knew first hand
the benefits of preschool. "The jump start to school makes a real difference,"
she said last week, sipping on a cup of coffee in Tasiuqtigiits family
resource centre.
Earlier this year, Johnson
approached Nunavuts department of education about starting up the program,
and it came through with the funding to get it going. The education department
is now in the process of officially licencing the preschool.
As she sits in the resource
centres kitchen, her three-year-old son and 10-year-old daughter playing
in the nearby toy room, Johnson talks about her vision for the new program.
She said the preschool
will run the length of a regular school year, with classes taking place just
in the mornings. The English courses will run on Mondays and Wednesdays and
Inuktitut on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Johnson is particularly
keen on the Inuktitut lessons because she sees them as a way to help Inuit children
learn their native language before they enter the school system.
"It breaks my heart
to hear of children losing their first language just because theres not
enough programs in town," she said.
The Inuktitut class can
take 14 students, and another 14 can go into the English stream. Johnson said
if theres enough demand, the preschool might add afternoon classes.
The two soon-to-be teachers
are now taking courses to get prepared for September. Theyre studying
early childhood education through distance education courses.
While Nunavut doesnt
require that preschool teachers have a diploma, Johnson said the new teachers
wanted to get the extra training. "Its important for them to see
themselves as teachers and not as babysitters," she said.
On top of her courses,
Tagak is working on creating small Inuktitut books for her students. "I
want to help children learn more Inuktitut," said the 28-year-old, who
is originally from Pond Inlet.
Over the summer, boxes
of toys have been arriving and Tasiuqtigiit will soon start transforming the
lower level of the duplex into a preschool. Some of the supplies arrived just
two weeks ago, and Johnson has set up a play kitchen area and a dress-up area
in one of the large rooms.
Later, theyll add
cultural items such as Inuit dolls and amautiit for the children to dress up
in.
In addition to the preschool,
Tasiuqtigiit is partnering up with another local group, the Kinguvatta Society,
to introduce an Inuktitut-only daycare to Iqaluit. Right now, daycares in the
capital city mainly operate in English.
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