School and learning
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Runners’ high: School opens rubberized track
3 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 22, 2021Anxiety, hope as children return to school
6 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 8, 2021More young critics weigh in on Summer Reading Challenge books
13 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 4, 2021I meme, you meme: internet language brings us together
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Aug. 18, 2021Prominent fact-checker Snopes apologizes for plagiarism
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026Association hopes library donation expands understanding of Islam
3 minute read Saturday, Nov. 14, 2020The Winnipeg Public Library will soon have new books about the Prophet Muhammad, thanks to a donation from the Manitoba Islamic Association.
“We want to provide factual information about Islam,” said Philip Bravo, who is responsible for adult non-fiction for the library.
The offer of free books will “help us fulfil our mission of enriching the lives of all Winnipeggers,” he said, adding the books will be made available in all of the city’s branches.
The idea for donating books about Islam grew out the recent attacks in France following depictions of the prophet, said Idris Elbakri, MIA’s board chairman.
Indigenous, Muslim youth event seeks to build friendships
2 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 15, 2020Quand elle était enfant, Sophie Bissonnette n’avait pas d’intérêt évident pour un sport particulier. Ses parents ont donc décidé de l’inscrire au baseball, la passion de son père, Marc Bissonnette. Devenue elle-même amoureuse du sport, elle a joué pendant 15 ans dans des équipes masculines, puis féminines.
À ses débuts, le baseball était surtout l’occasion pour Sophie Bissonnette de passer du temps avec son père. “Il m’a toujours entraînée, et ça me plaisait beaucoup d’avoir ces moments avec lui. Dans ma première équipe, il y avait six filles et un garçon. Au fil des années, il y a eu de moins en moins de joueuses, jusqu’à ce que je sois la seule de mon équipe.”
Une situation qui a quelque peu préoccupé ses parents. “Ma mère était inquiète que je ne sois qu’avec des garçons. Mes parents m’ont proposé de passer au softball, pour être avec d’autres filles. Mais pour moi, c’est un sport complètement différent, et je ne voulais pas arrêter le baseball.”
Sophie n’a senti une différence que quand elle a commencé à jouer à haut niveau. “L’entraîneur me traitait comme les autres joueurs. Mais je n’étais pas la meilleure, et je sentais que je devais travailler plus fort, parce qu’il y avait des préjugés. Quand il y a 12 garçons et une fille sur le terrain, on remarque la fille et on prête plus attention à ce qu’elle fait. Mais j’avais ma place dans l’équipe, et j’étais prête à tout pour y rester.”
Riel, le lien entre les francos d’Amérique
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 18, 2017Traversant le Canada en 20 chansons
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Jul. 8, 2017Event aims to share what it means to be Muslim and Canadian
4 minute read Preview Friday, Jun. 30, 2017‘Cette terre n’a fait aucun mal’
5 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 13, 2017Banning YouTube removes tools from schools
4 minute read Preview Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDTYouth unemployment more than just an economic statistic
5 minute read Preview Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDTImprov co-conspirators reuniting for frenetic weekend comedy blitz
4 minute read Preview Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDTCombat in the classroom: Many Manitoba public school teachers are concerned violence is making their jobs more difficult
9 minute read Preview Friday, May. 22, 2026Louis Riel division hires province’s first Indigenous woman superintendent
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 20, 2026Premier has everyone’s attention on and about social media; now it’s time for some careful thought
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 20, 2026Small businesses’ capacity to hire youth being constrained: CFIB survey
3 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 21, 2026It takes a village to raise — and educate — a child
6 minute read Tuesday, May. 19, 2026The oft-quoted saying, “it takes a village to raise a child,” resembles an African proverb. In the Yoruba language, the saying goes “two eyes birth a child, but 200 eyes raise it.”
Over the past several decades, that saying has come to mean something entirely different from what villagers meant, in Africa and in the small town where I grew up. The saying meant two, equally important things. It meant the community has a stake in ensuring that children are properly cared for, but the saying also meant that children must be taught and understand their obligations to the community at large.
The 200 eyes raising the child in the village did not look away when the parents or a child failed to observe community standards. When a child disrespected someone in the community, they were corrected. The village had a clear code of conduct that governed what was expected behaviour. These mores, or societal expectations, were understood and enforced by both parents and community members.
Everyone needs to understand their society’s written and unwritten rules. It is our obligation to teach our children the expectations we have of each other.
People for Education explore convergence of public education and truth and reconciliation
4 minute read Preview Sunday, May. 17, 2026Fort Richmond elementary school shedding racist lord’s name
4 minute read Preview Friday, May. 15, 2026Skilled trades: a first-choice career
4 minute read Friday, May. 15, 2026Skilled tradespeople have always played a leading role in shaping Canada.
They’ve built, modified and maintained infrastructure that houses us, keeps us safe and makes it possible for us to have an advanced and diverse economy for generations.
Yet, somehow, we’ve failed to communicate this to young people at the family dinner table, in primary, middle and secondary school classrooms, at virtually any point of influence when discussing post-secondary education options.
This neglect around the optics of skilled trades has created a gap in public knowledge about what they entail. Skilled tradespeople have evolved their roles and capabilities in lockstep with the complexity of the world in which they work.