Whose story is being told? How perspectives shape our understanding
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Interest in respiratory therapy training surges as province seeks to fill demand
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026Sewing studio offers classes for crafty folks
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026What to do with inconvenient wildlife
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026The pitfalls of increased use of AI in policing
5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026As a part of its body-worn camera program, the RCMP recently completed a pilot project using artificial intelligence to draft reports. The AI-generated reports are created from audio captured from officers’ body cameras. A report can be drafted in mere seconds. The pilot, which ran for about six months and concluded in January, occurred across eight detachments in British Columbia generating nearly 800 reports.
Harnessing AI to write police reports is replete with some serious and unresolved concerns and must be immediately discontinued.
It isn’t even entirely clear why police need to use AI in the first place.
The primary justification for the expanding use of AI to generate police reports across law enforcement is to free police from the administrative burden of having to write reports in the first place. The idea is that officers could do more relevant police work, presumably patrol work.
After facing the death of its dominant newspaper, Pittsburgh’s media has a surprising turnaround
8 minute read Preview Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026Most fashion mannequins are about a size 2. The Met Gala exhibit is making room for diverse bodies
7 minute read Preview Tuesday, May. 12, 2026North End vocational school opens ‘cultural learning lab’ creative design studio
4 minute read Preview Monday, Apr. 20, 2026Rural communities team up to court doctors
4 minute read Preview Monday, Apr. 20, 2026In praise of the deliberately slower lane
5 minute read Preview Monday, Apr. 20, 2026Small towns and temporary foreign workers
4 minute read Monday, Apr. 20, 2026On any given day in a small town, restaurants should be busy. Orders coming in. People being served. The steady rhythm of a place that’s part of the community.
Instead, more and more locations are running below capacity; not because customers aren’t there, but because there aren’t enough staff.
This is the reality in many rural and tourism communities across Canada.
Recently, Ottawa took a small but important step to begin to address it.