Youth culture
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Traversant 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, 2017Relocation of program for young moms earns poor marks
5 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDTThe 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
4 minute read Preview Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDTManitoba Construction Career Expo draws students from across province with goal of ‘AI-resilient’ career options
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 6, 2026Parents irked after school ditches Mother’s Day
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 6, 2026Foreign actors producing more false content about Alberta separatism: report
3 minute read Preview Updated: Yesterday at 8:28 AM CDTInclusive, integrated musical theatre company in Winnipeg first of its kind in Canada
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 6, 2026Met gala guests deliver works of art on the human form
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 6, 2026Delaying access to social media
4 minute read Tuesday, May. 5, 2026An 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
4 minute read Preview Monday, May. 4, 2026Introducing students to the wonderful world of volunteering
4 minute read Preview Monday, May. 4, 2026Study probes experiences of Indigenous grads
4 minute read Preview Monday, May. 4, 2026Project brings seniors, students together over love of gardening
4 minute read Preview Monday, May. 4, 2026Structured approach needed with tech
4 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026Families 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
4 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 2, 2026Empower youth by giving them tools to stay safe online
5 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 2, 2026Manitoba construction groups call for journeyperson-to-apprentice ratio rework
4 minute read Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026While 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.