Youth culture

Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.

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Traversant le Canada en 20 chansons

Manella Vila Nova 4 minute read Preview
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Traversant le Canada en 20 chansons

Manella Vila Nova 4 minute read Saturday, Jul. 8, 2017

De La Rochelle à la Colombie-Britannique en passant par l’Acadie, le Québec, l’Ontario et les Prairies, voici le voyage que proposera la chorale québécoise En Supplément’Air dans la Cathédrale de Saint-Boniface à l’occasion du 150e anniversaire de la Confédération canadienne, le 11 juillet.

Le Chœur En Supplément’Air a été fondé en 2015 par Carole Bellavance, la directrice artistique de la chorale. “Cette année, le chœur compte 300 choristes de toute la province du Québec. Tous les étés, nous organisons une tournée avec une quarantaine d’entre eux. Nous sommes partis le 3 juillet pour un premier concert à Ottawa, puis nous nous rendrons à North Bay, Sault Sainte-Marie, Thunder Bay. Nous terminerons à Winnipeg le 11 juillet,” Bellavance a dit.

C’est la première fois que le chœur se déplace aussi loin à l’ouest du Canada. “Avec notre spectacle Le périple de la chanson francophone en Haute-Amérique, nous voulons faire valoir l’histoire de la chanson francophone au Canada à travers le temps. Nous avons choisi des chansons de partout pour mettre en valeur les régions. Le propos se prête bien à la grande aventure de la francophonie canadienne. J’ai profité du 150e anniversaire de la Confédération pour faire vivre aux choristes les chansons francophones canadiennes, et pas seulement québécoises.”

Harmonisé et orchestré par François Couture, le spectacle met la culture francophone au premier plan. “La culture francophone a été apportée de l’Europe. Pour illustrer cela, notre première chanson s’intitule Je pars à l’autre bout du monde. Au début du spectacle, on se sent vraiment à La Rochelle. Ensuite, on arrive dans les Maritimes avec des chansons qui reflètent l’histoire de l’Acadie, puis du Québec, et le développement de l’Ontario. Nous suivons le trajet de la chanson francophone, d’est en ouest.”

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Saturday, Jul. 8, 2017
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Event aims to share what it means to be Muslim and Canadian

Brenda Suderman  4 minute read Preview
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Event aims to share what it means to be Muslim and Canadian

Brenda Suderman  4 minute read Friday, Jun. 30, 2017

ALTHOUGH she’s still in high school, Maryam Islam already knows what it is like to face discrimination because she wears a head scarf as part of her Muslim beliefs.

 

“Whenever it’s a group activity or a class discussion, people may question before putting me in a group,” the Grade 10 student at Fort Richmond Collegiate says.

“Whenever I get into a group I try to be nice and kind and to show I’m not an alien.”

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Friday, Jun. 30, 2017
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‘Cette terre n’a fait aucun mal’

Gavin Boutroy de La Liberté pour le Winnipeg Free Press 5 minute read Preview
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‘Cette terre n’a fait aucun mal’

Gavin Boutroy de La Liberté pour le Winnipeg Free Press 5 minute read Saturday, May. 13, 2017

Le 3 mai, une caravane d’étudiants en architecture paysagiste de l’Université du Manitoba a été accueillie devant le bâtiment d’autogouvernement de la Nation Dakota de Sioux Valley. Ils ont présenté à un comité du conseil de bande leurs plans pour l’aménagement d’un centre de guérison sur les lieux de l’École industrielle indienne de Brandon.

L’École industrielle indienne de Brandon était un pensionnat autochtone où, de 1895 à 1972, des enfants autochtones étaient éduqués par divers ordres religieux selon la politique d’assimilation du gouvernement canadien. Le chef de la Nation Dakota de Sioux Valley, Vincent Tacan, indique qu’il y a grand nombre de survivants de l’ancien pensionnat dans sa Nation.

“Nous avons besoin de guérir. Nous sentons les effets intergénérationnels des pensionnats autochtones. Essayer d’aller de l’avant avant de guérir serait inutile.”

Le Sud-ouest du Manitoba n’a aucun centre de guérison avec un environnement approprié aux cultures autochtones. Le chef Tacan note que les membres de sa Nation en besoin de traitement doivent se rendre à Regina, ou encore en Alberta.

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Saturday, May. 13, 2017

Relocation of program for young moms earns poor marks

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

The Winnipeg School Division is facing backlash over plans to relocate its holistic education program for pregnant teenagers and young moms.

Starting in September, the Adolescent Parent Centre — an off-campus program that’s been housed at 136 Cecil St. since 1989 — will operate inside a North End high school.

“One of the big reasons I wanted to go is because I knew I’d be in a school surrounded by a bunch of people who were in the exact same situation as me,” said Billie Pryor, a 2023 graduate who enrolled when she, then 14, was pregnant with the first of her three children.

Pryor, 20, said the student population, free on-site daycare rooms and distance from traditional high schools, where gossip is commonplace and physical fights break out, were part of its appeal.

U of M fundraising $30K for dedicated breastfeeding space

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Preview

U of M fundraising $30K for dedicated breastfeeding space

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

The University of Manitoba is fundraising $30,000 for a lactation pod in an effort to address gaps in academia which have led to a “leaky pipeline.”

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Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Manitoba Construction Career Expo draws students from across province with goal of ‘AI-resilient’ career options

Malak Abas 4 minute read Preview

Manitoba Construction Career Expo draws students from across province with goal of ‘AI-resilient’ career options

Malak Abas 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

More than 1,200 students from across Manitoba hammered nails, operated miniature machinery and even tried their hand at masonry at a hands-on career fair organizers called a pitch for the “AI-resilient” jobs of the future.

The Manitoba Construction Career Expo has been organized by the Winnipeg Construction Association for more than 15 years. As Canada’s career landscape has changed for youth, there’s been an increasing interest in logging out of the virtual world and finding a more tactile profession, said Darryl Harrison, the association’s director of stakeholder engagement and advocacy.

“There’s a lot of opportunities in construction, whether you pursue an apprenticeship or take another path toward the industry, but it generally leads to well-paying jobs and it leads to a career that we’re now calling AI-resilient,” Harrison said at the event at Red River Exhibition Place on Wednesday.

“There’s a lot of careers where it’s questionable what the impact of AI will be, and we will always need hands-on work sites to build the buildings that we need.”

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Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

Parents irked after school ditches Mother’s Day

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Preview

Parents irked after school ditches Mother’s Day

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

Winnipeg families are decrying an elementary school’s decision to rebrand an annual tradition — making macaroni necklaces and other crafts for Mother’s Day — in the name of inclusion.

Grade 1 and 2 teachers at Sage Creek School informed parents this week that their children will bring home “family gifts” later this spring.

Instead of making items specifically for Mother’s Day or Father’s Day, student-made creations will be distributed on May 15, the International Day of Families.

“Where is the line? What is next? At what point are you being more exclusive than inclusive?” said Ashley Dolphin, a mother of two, including a Grade 1 student at the kindergarten-to-Grade 8 school.

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Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

Foreign actors producing more false content about Alberta separatism: report

Fakiha Baig, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview

Foreign actors producing more false content about Alberta separatism: report

Fakiha Baig, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 8:28 AM CDT

EDMONTON - Foreign actors are increasingly generating articles, podcasts and social media posts riddled with disinformation about Alberta's separatist movement, says a new report.

The report from a team of researchers, published Wednesday by the Canadian monitoring platform DisinfoWatch, says the campaigns are coming out of Russia and the United States.

It says social media influencers with millions of followers are generating the disinformation in the United States.

"This matters because influencers increasingly command more attention than traditional institutions and can move fringe narratives into mainstream political debate," the report says.

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Updated: Yesterday at 8:28 AM CDT
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Inclusive, integrated musical theatre company in Winnipeg first of its kind in Canada

Ben Waldman 4 minute read Preview
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Inclusive, integrated musical theatre company in Winnipeg first of its kind in Canada

Ben Waldman 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

With its first public performance — a revue of numbers from family favourites such as Toy Story and Frozen — a new performing arts organization in Winnipeg is aiming at a more accessible, accepting and diverse vision of musical theatre production.

Co-founded by theatre educators Brenda Gorlick, Lois Brothers and Laura Kolisnyk, AIM 4 All brings together performers with and without disabilities to train, practise and perform in full-scale musical productions: AIM stands for “all-inclusive musicals.”

This weekend, 28 Manitobans will take the stage in five stagings of Disney’s Dare to Dream Jr. at the University of Winnipeg’s Asper Centre for Theatre.

With plenty of supportive family and community members excited to see the result of months of preparation, the organizers are pleased to say each show is sold out.

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Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

Met gala guests deliver works of art on the human form

Beatrice Dupuy, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview

Met gala guests deliver works of art on the human form

Beatrice Dupuy, The Associated Press 5 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

New York (AP) — Whether dressed in a jewel-encrusted skeletal form, sculpted breast plates or anatomy-evoking trompe l’oeil, Met Gala guests physically evoked the theme “fashion is art” Monday evening as they masterfully pulled from a kaleidoscope of references to embody living works of art.

“Everyone who attended the Met Gala this year really leaned into fashion is art, using your body as a canvas, and that really came across in some of the best-dressed looks of the night,” said Kevin Huynh, fashion director of InStyle.

Fashionable A-listers gave into the theme and had fun with it. First-time Met Gala attendees included actors Chase Infiniti and Hudson Williams, as well as Olympian Alysa Liu, all of whom commanded the carpet in dramatic ensembles. Infiniti, for example, donned an enchanting Thom Browne sequined gown using trompe l’oeil to depict the female form.

Meanwhile, Met Gala mega stars and repeat attendees rose to the occasion: Vogue red-carpet correspondent Emma Chamberlain playfully dressed in a dramatic long-sleeved gown that appeared dipped in a rainbow of color from indigo to the brightest yellow-gold. And after 10 years of skipping the Gala, Beyoncé arrived to reclaim her throne, wearing a glittering crown and radiant Olivier Rousteing silver gown designed in the shape of a skeleton.

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Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

Delaying access to social media

Lianna McDonald 4 minute read Tuesday, May. 5, 2026

An 11-year-old boy is threatened with the distribution of nude images unless he pays an international extortionist who found him on TikTok. A 12-year-old girl is relentlessly pressured by someone she believed was a friend to expose herself on camera. A 14-year-old boy is unravelling — failing classes, withdrawing from life — because his friend is being exploited on Roblox and he feels powerless to help.

These are not outliers. In 2025 alone, Cybertip.ca processed more than 28,000 reports. These are just three.

Canada’s children are not stumbling into harm by accident. They are being systematically exposed to it — on platforms engineered to capture their attention, monetize their vulnerability and retain their engagement at all costs. The scale and severity of harm now demand more than incremental reform. They demand intervention.

For over 25 years, the Canadian Centre for Child Protection has documented a steep and accelerating rise in online harms against children. This trajectory is not coincidental. It reflects a digital environment that is fundamentally misaligned with the developmental realities of childhood.

Longtime chefs honoured for nutritious, delicious school cuisine for only $4 a plate

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Preview

Longtime chefs honoured for nutritious, delicious school cuisine for only $4 a plate

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026

A duo of longtime chefs in the Lord Selkirk School Division have won Manitoba’s inaugural prize for “excellence in school nutrition.”

Josh Hogan and Paul Augst have won over picky eaters and a panel of judges with their rotating school lunch menu.

“We really like to focus on fresh herbs like basil, oregano and parsley. It’s an easy way to bring new flavours to the kids that’s not overwhelming,” Hogan said.

The nutrition program co-ordinator, alongside Augst, a chef with more than 30 years of experience, are being celebrated for finding a way to feed 400 children lunch, three times a week, for no more than $4 per plate.

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Monday, May. 4, 2026

Introducing students to the wonderful world of volunteering

AV Kitching 4 minute read Preview

Introducing students to the wonderful world of volunteering

AV Kitching 4 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026

Jasmin Knight has built her career around giving back to the community.

Fuelled by her own history of helping, the student concierge at Heartland International English School began organizing volunteer placements for mature students on a casual basis.

The positive feedback from students, many of whom have never volunteered before, led to the creation of the school’s Volunteer + Study program, which launched last year.

Now Knight, 31, says she can offer students a more formal method of applying for volunteer positions in the city.

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Monday, May. 4, 2026

Study probes experiences of Indigenous grads

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Preview

Study probes experiences of Indigenous grads

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026

Brandon Murdock recalled thinking in 2020 that, despite his struggling academic performance, he had “a solid case” to remain enrolled at the University of Winnipeg.

Murdock was mistaken — it didn’t matter that he’d missed a voluntary course withdrawal date because he’d been overwhelmed with grief amid a wave of COVID-19-related deaths in Fisher River Cree Nation, the 31-year-old said.

There was little slack for a student who had already been suspended once before. His arts degree program, which he began in 2012, was initially put on hold in 2015 because his attendance, grades and motivation suffered during a family health crisis.

Murdock shared those challenges, among others he’s faced as a first-generation university student who grew up in foster care, as part of a recent study about the experiences of Indigenous and racialized Grade 12 graduates in Winnipeg.

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Monday, May. 4, 2026
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Project brings seniors, students together over love of gardening

John Longhurst 4 minute read Preview
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Project brings seniors, students together over love of gardening

John Longhurst 4 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026

Seniors and high school students in North Kildonan are growing vegetables and community through a unique indoor gardening project.

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Monday, May. 4, 2026

Structured approach needed with tech

Jo Ann Unger and Michelle Warren 4 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026

Families need our help and support. Technology has done many things to better our world; from life-saving medical advances to connecting people across the world to efficiencies in our everyday lives.

RRC Polytech program cuts take bite out of hospitality, tourism sector

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Preview

RRC Polytech program cuts take bite out of hospitality, tourism sector

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Saturday, May. 2, 2026

Manitoba’s tourism industry is bracing for the disappearance of hospitality training programs — once-popular courses among international students.

Citing budgetary challenges related to a shift in federal immigration policy, Red River College Polytechnic is scrapping 11 programs and scaling back three others in 2026-27. Its hospitality business management diploma is one of seven permanent casualties.

The announcement, while unsurprising, is but the latest blow to a sector trying to “build back the workforce” in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, said Michael Juce, president of the Manitoba Hotel Association.

“Are people going to go outside of Manitoba for training? And if they leave, are they going to come back?” Juce said, adding that rural hotels in particular are already grappling with staffing shortages.

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Saturday, May. 2, 2026

Empower youth by giving them tools to stay safe online

Jen Zoratti 5 minute read Preview

Empower youth by giving them tools to stay safe online

Jen Zoratti 5 minute read Saturday, May. 2, 2026

Do you support banning kids from social media? Do you also post photos of your kids on your Facebook or Instagram?

Whenever the topic of banning social media for kids comes up, as it did again this week when Premier Wab Kinew announced that Manitoba will ban youth from using social media and AI chatbots, we run into a wee bit of cognitive dissonance among the adults.

Many of today’s young people had social media presences long before they were old enough to consent to them — not as users, but as content posted by their parents. Instagram is nearly 16 years old; the iPhone nearly 20. A lot of kids have had digital footprints since the sonogram. Their whole lives are online.

So, as young people who are already on social media transition into social media users themselves, we should, as a society, empower them to make informed decisions about how, where and if they want to show up online, not ban them from platforms they use to connect with their peers, express their creativity and learn about the world. Platforms they’ve grown up around and, in many cases, on.

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Saturday, May. 2, 2026

While Ottawa moves to invest billions into skilled trade workers, Manitoba construction groups say the provincial government refuses to budge on its apprenticeship ratio guidelines at the cost of their industry.

RRC Polytech reduces program offerings, lays off 26 staff

Morgan Modjeski 2 minute read Preview

RRC Polytech reduces program offerings, lays off 26 staff

Morgan Modjeski 2 minute read Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

RRC Polytech has announced it will let go 26 employees as it prepares to end some programs and suspend others.

The post-secondary institution blamed the reduction in international student enrolment and reduced English language-training funding as a result of federal changes to immigration policy.

“These changes, along with shifting domestic enrolment trends in some programs and increased program delivery costs, have had direct impacts on operations and financial stability at RRC Polytech,” said a news release issued Thursday.

“These impacts have both immediate and long-term financial implications that we must responsibly address.”

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Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

Toy company Spin Master bracing for rising production, shipping costs from war

Tara Deschamps, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

Toy company Spin Master bracing for rising production, shipping costs from war

Tara Deschamps, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

TORONTO - The war in the Middle East will soon make your kid's favourite toys more expensive to produce and deliver to store shelves.

Spin Master Corp., the Toronto-based firm behind Paw Patrol, Gabby's Dollhouse and Ms. Rachel toys, said Thursday that a blockage of one of the region's key shipping routes is pushing up its freight, resin and packaging costs.

The impact has so far been minimal because the company had several contracts with suppliers that locked in commodity prices before the conflict began on Feb. 28.

But chief financial officer Jonathan Roiter said that will soon change.

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Friday, May. 1, 2026

Young Canadians want AI companies to make their chatbots less addictive: report

Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview

Young Canadians want AI companies to make their chatbots less addictive: report

Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

OTTAWA - A new report focusing on the perspectives of young people says the government should order AI companies to take steps to curb the addictive aspects of their AI chatbots.

It’s one of a series of recommendations made by youth between the ages of 17 and 23 who took part in roundtables across the country.

Participants presented the report — published by McGill University’s Centre for Media, Technology and Democracy and Simon Fraser University's Dialogue on Technology Project — and its recommendations on Parliament Hill on Thursday.

Maddie Case, a youth fellow with the McGill centre, introduced the 25 young people who developed the chatbot recommendations.

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Friday, May. 1, 2026
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Winnipeg photographer captures striking stills that market major motion pictures

AV Kitching 7 minute read Preview
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Winnipeg photographer captures striking stills that market major motion pictures

AV Kitching 7 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Eric Zachanowich is the most famous photographer you’ve probably never heard of.

He’s worked with Tinseltown heavyweights such as the late Robert Redford, Ralph Fiennes, Laura Linney, Woody Harrelson and Anya Taylor-Joy, and even appeared in Dwayne (The Rock) Johnson’s wrestling biopic The Smashing Machine, disguised as, you guessed it, a photographer.

“It was for one of the opening scenes so I could shoot Dwayne Johnson walking to the ring. I made the final cut of the movie — although it’s hard to place me — and also got a spectacular photo that was used heavily during marketing,” says Zachanowich, 32.

More often than not, he operates as a silent observer on the sets of cinema blockbusters and prestige television dramas alike, his lens capturing the world’s biggest A-listers at their most vulnerable and intense moments.

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Kinew threatens billion-dollar fines for tech giants ignoring social-media ban for youths

Carol Sanders 5 minute read Preview

Kinew threatens billion-dollar fines for tech giants ignoring social-media ban for youths

Carol Sanders 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Manitoba may impose billion-dollar fines on tech companies that violate a proposed ban on social media and AI chatbots for youths under the age 16.

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026