Week 2 started up with more travel. Moday we flew to Trout Lake for a full day of science with a school of 11 students in grades K-9. Rather than splitting them up and trying to run an activity with three primary students, we put them all together. It was great to see how the older students helped out the younger ones. The students were thrilled to see us and kept asking when we would come back. Unlike every other town we visited, Trout Lake isn't on a major river or roadway. The only road access is during the winter so it's a lot more isolated than other towns. Trapping and fishing season is starting up, so the teacher reminded students at the end of the day that unless they were sitting in a boat, they should be at school the next day. Attitudes on attendance (from parents, teachers, and sutdents) area a lot more relaxed. We ask the teacher before class how many students to expect and always get two numbers. The number enrolled, and a number 1/2 to 3/4 the size which is how many will usually show up.
Wednesday we started up in Fort Providence. A town of about 800 people, Providence is much closer to Yellowknife and the major roade of NWT, so is more prosperous and well serviced than anywhere else we'd been so far. The school is elementary, high school, and a satellite campus of Aurora college all in one buillding. We moved through from youngest to older starting in Kindergarten. This school was particularly fun becuase it's immersion up to grade 3 so classes are taught in Slavey. We got the kids to teach us a couple of workds, and apparently were REALLY bad at it. Having grade ones laugh at how you pronounce things is a clear sign that you need more practice. It was awesome to see how the local culture influenced the school. A lot of teachers up here are from southern Canada (I don't think there's anyone left in Nova Scotia, I've met so many of them up here), and they were all calling our instructions (get to class, etc) to the students in Slavey. The only phrase I have memorized is 'Mahsi Cho" which means "Thank you".
Tuesday was our last morning in Fort Simpson. We had a charter plane for the day: just Danielle, myself, our lugage, and Taylor the pilot, which meant one of us got to sit in the front with a headset. We flew to Wrigley, split up to deliver two presentations to 15 kids, flew to Nahanni Butte, repeat presentations, and were dropped off in Fort Providence by 4:30pm. Taylor was pretty cool, he pointed out landmarks, explained what controls did what on the plane, and just for fun sat in one the first half of my workshop in Nahanni Butte (then he had to go refuel the plane). The flight from Wrigley to Nahanni Butte took us through an area between the Nahanni Mountains and the rest of the Rockies. It was absolutely gorgeous but my camera battery was dead :(. I'm gong to be bugging Danielle for photos. Taylor was thrilled as both towns are pretty tiny so it's not a run he gets to do very often.
Wednesday we started up in Fort Providence. A town of about 800 people, Providence is much closer to Yellowknife and the major roade of NWT, so is more prosperous and well serviced than anywhere else we'd been so far. The school is elementary, high school, and a satellite campus of Aurora college all in one buillding. We moved through from youngest to older starting in Kindergarten. This school was particularly fun becuase it's immersion up to grade 3 so classes are taught in Slavey. We got the kids to teach us a couple of workds, and apparently were REALLY bad at it. Having grade ones laugh at how you pronounce things is a clear sign that you need more practice. It was awesome to see how the local culture influenced the school. A lot of teachers up here are from southern Canada (I don't think there's anyone left in Nova Scotia, I've met so many of them up here), and they were all calling our instructions (get to class, etc) to the students in Slavey. The only phrase I have memorized is 'Mahsi Cho" which means "Thank you".
One thing we always try to do is ask the kids to tell us something cool about their town, or tell us where we should go/what we should do while we're there. In Providence the grade 5s told us that the coolest thing about their town was the Big Rock. It's a big rock.
Friday morning we left Providence for Hay River with a brief stop at Kakisa for a make-up presentation. The Kakisa students were supposed to join the Jean Marie River students at the presentations we missed due to snow. All of the students had piled into vans and drove three hours to Jean Marie, then had to drive back. By all the students, I mean all 8 of them. On the drive we took a ferry by the largest bridge in NWT, currently under construction. The bridge needs to be built super tough to withstand the freezing of the Mackenzie, but it'll help connect Fort Providence and the towns beyond to Yellowknife and Hay River. Looking forward to long weekend in the Hub!
Awesome Liz! It sounds pretty awesome up there and a ton of fun with all of the kids!
ReplyDeleteHave a good Victoria day!
I think the Big Rcok is pretty cool. My favourite thing about it is the spelling of its name.
ReplyDeleteXOX Mom
The coolest thing in town is a big rock named The Big Rcok?
ReplyDelete:D Apparently so.
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