High-schoolers tap into flower power
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 18/04/2025 (343 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
Garden City students can buy themselves flowers, but they don’t need to thanks to a growing partnership in their school division.
Miley Cyrus’ Flowers blasted from speakers inside the Collège Garden City Collegiate atrium on Wednesday as members of its adult transition program sorted and snipped stems.
The 2023 radio hit — a favourite among the amateur florists, many of whom broke out into song and dance — was a fitting soundtrack for their weekly workshop.
Garden City Collegiate adult transition program students Mohamad Dalank (left, 20) and Logan Brown (18) hand flowers to educational assistant Clayton Lyons to tie with wire while building bouquets.
Sophia Ly, who is largely non-verbal, bobbed her head to the beat.
The 20-year-old plucked a yellow chrysanthemum, the largest of all the available blooms, to begin her latest bouquet.
“As they put them together, they’re learning a bit about biology, about science and art, as well, because each one of them has their own style,” said Stephan Carson, a learning support teacher at the high school.
For the better part of the last decade, Petals West Inc. has been dropping off excess stock at 711 Jefferson Ave. for young adults who have intellectual and developmental disabilities.
Carson likened every Wednesday on the campus in north Winnipeg to Christmas Day.
The wholesaler’s packages change every week, but no matter what, their contents put smiles on students’ faces, he said, noting that some participants use the PlantNet app to identify species.
On Wednesday, the group sorted through bundles of multi-coloured carnations, Prairie sunflowers and filler foliage.
The Seven Oaks School Division reached out to Petals West to collaborate at the suggestion of a community member in 2017.
(The company’s manager has been keen to contribute throughout the school year, except for when his team is swamped with orders around Valentine’s Day and Mother’s Day.)
Logan Brown (left, 18) and Sophia Ly (20) build bouquets with educational assistant Shannon Kohut.
Division employees indicated the initiative started as a way to help students who are getting ready to leave school build confidence, independence and multi-step routines. Its success has prompted an expansion to, as of last spring, include all three area high schools.
Participants from Garden City, The Maples and West Kildonan are now their division’s go-to decorators. They are tapped to make arrangements for special events, such as retirement celebrations and school concerts.
The up-and-coming florists, who range in age from 18 to 21, will have an opportunity to show off their creations at the Seven Oaks Evening of Black Excellence later this month.
“We really want to strive to not be a specialized program in a room, closed-doors, not accessing the outside world because ultimately, we want them to be independent and that they are connected to the community,” Carson said.
His students prepare 300 hot meals on a daily basis for the school lunch program, organize community cleanups and run coffee cart and “wobbly-table fixing” businesses.
Some of them take part in work placements as they approach graduation, although not one has yet to secure an internship at a flower shop.
“We may need to start sending out some resumés because two girls who absolutely love (the bouquet-making) are transitioning out soon,” their teacher said.
Logan Brown said he’s become a better organizer because the floral activity requires students to plan and communicate to secure everything they need, from wrapping paper to water buckets.
“I’m usually a bit tired afterwards,” the 18-year-old said. “I’m actually sweating right now.”
Mohamad Dalank (left), Marcus Velasco, Sophia Ly, and Logan Brown build bouquets.
The students are largely self-sufficient, although educational assistants help out where needed — for instance, when it’s time to use gardening shears to safely clean up stems.
“To me, it’s about giving the kids a purpose and they take pride in it,” said Brenda Bicklmeier, who runs the adult transition program at West Kildonan Collegiate.
Bicklmeier’s students both donate their creations and sell them within the school community for $5 each to raise money for field trips and related activities.
The program boosts morale in the school community at large, she said, noting that one student from outside of the program recently bought an arrangement to give to his mom for her birthday.
maggie.macintosh@freepress.mb.ca
Maggie Macintosh
Education reporter
Maggie Macintosh reports on education for the Free Press. Originally from Hamilton, Ont., she first reported for the Free Press in 2017. Read more about Maggie.
Funding for the Free Press education reporter comes from the Government of Canada through the Local Journalism Initiative.
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