Edmonton Social Planning Council

Category: Resources: Education

  • Community Matters (March 2023) — Literacy: In Its Many Forms

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    Note: This is excerpted from the March 2023 edition of our Community Matters publication. 

    Welcome to the Spring Edition of our quarterly publication, Community Matters.

    Community Matters aims to inform the community about social issues that impact citizens and connect the dots between social issues, evidence, and policy. We aim to use this space to give a voice to local agencies, ESPC volunteer writers, and staff members alike.

    Each edition spotlights a specific social issue and demonstrates the intersectional nature and impacts on equality. Our goal is to use evidence and the voices of the people as we continue to inform on the issues affecting individuals, families and our community.

    For the current edition, we are focusing on literacy in all its forms. When it comes to the work around poverty reduction and elimination, just as food security, housing security, income security, and others are integral strategies, so too is literacy and the positive impact it has on alleviating poverty. There is great work happening in our community around literacy, but part of affecting change is continuing to keep the conversation going.

    Literacy in its many forms, impacts nearly all facets of our lives and this issue of Community Matters strives to touch upon some of the varying intersections that literacy takes. This includes articles on digital literacy, cultural literacy, health literacy, physical literacy, legal literacy, as well as policy literacy and impacts on the wider educational system. All of these provide illumination on the various ways in which literacy is so crucial to navigating our complex society and how it helps people thrive.

    Improving literacy rates for marginalized populations means you are more likely to find and keep a job, attain education (particularly higher education), and participate meaningfully in communities and, more broadly, in democracy. With improved literacy rates comes a more empowered, educated, and healthier society.

    In Canada, nearly half (49%) of the adult population struggles to some extent with literacy, and we must work towards closing this gap.

    We hope these articles bring about more attention to the ways in which attaining these different types of literacy helps to build a community in which all people are full and valued participants.

    -Susan Morrissey, Executive Director

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    COMMUNITY MATTERS – MARCH 2023

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  • Blog: National Indigenous History Month: Acknowledging, Celebrating and Honouring 

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    By Amanda Labonte, Jenn Rossiter and Sydney Sheloff 

    National Indigenous History Month is a time for celebrating the rich and diverse histories and cultures of Indigenous Peoples.  

    As settlers and non-Indigenous persons on this land we have a responsibility to recognize there was a history long before contact. Indigenous Peoples had governance, justice, health care, education, community, food security, and family systems guided by their worldview.  

    Legislation such as the Indian Act and its policies were designed intentionally to harm and oppress Indigenous Peoples. The Indian Act is still in effect today, an 82 page document that has had some revisions over the years. The Act still directs policy, governance and decisions made about Indigenous Peoples rather than with Indigenous Peoples. Bob Joseph, of the Gwawaenuk Nation, wrote a book “21 things you may not know about the Indian act: Helping Canadians make reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples a reality” (2018) that included only 21 of the statues and/or policies. It is an excellent book to get started on understanding the Indian Act. 

    The ESPC (Edmonton Social Planning Council) is aware of the devastating impacts colonialism, has had, and continues to have on Indigenous Peoples, and the high rates of discrimination and racism Indigenous Peoples experience today. This is a topic people need to continue talking about, but it is not the whole history or the whole story. Indigenous Peoples have made countless achievements and contributions on this land for time immemorial.  

    The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada: Calls to Action is a crucial document for individuals and organizations to work towards reconciliation. We as a community have a long way to go before achieving reconciliation, and part of our responsibility as settlers and non-Indigenous persons on this land is to engage in and listen to Indigenous culture and history as written, spoken and shared by Indigenous Peoples. 

    In contribution to National Indigenous History Month and reconciliation here are some resources, written or spoken by Indigenous Peoples. We hope you take time to explore these valuable works and others. 

    Events and Experiences 

    Should you be interested in engaging in experiences related to Indigenous histories in Amishkwaciy Waskahikan (Edmonton), we suggest you look at this list curated by Mackenzie Brown. The list is large and covers events, museums, cuisine, music and much more.  

    Listen to Podcasts 

    2 Crees in a Pod on Spotify is produced and hosted by Terri Sunjtens, Director of Indigenous Initiatives at kihêw waciston at MacEwan University. The podcast is co-hosted by Amber Dion, an assistant professor at the School of Social Work, MacEwan University. This podcast was nominated for a 2020 Canadian Podcast Award. 

    Unreserved on CBCListen is hosted by Rosanna Deerchild from O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree Nation. Deerchild in addition to being a radio host is a writer and poet. During the 2020-2021 Unreserved was guest hosted by Falen Johnson, who is from Six Nations Grand River Territory and is also a playwright.  

    Read a Blog 

     Working Effectively with Indigenous Peoples writer Bob Joseph is the founder of Indigenous Corporate Training Inc. Joseph writes on several topics including Indigenous histories and untold stories.  

    Watch a Film:  

    Tasha Hubbard  

    Hubbard is an academic documentary filmmaker from Peepeekisis First Nation. Her films explore violence against Indigenous people, including: Two Worlds Colliding, a look at the “Starlight Tours,” or freezing deaths, in Saskatchewan, and Nîpawistamâsowin: We Will Stand Up which follows the family of Colton Boushie as they fight for justice after his death. 

    We suggest:  

    Hubbard, T. (Director). (2005). Two worlds colliding [film]. National Film Board of Canada.  

    Hubbard, T. (Director). (2019). Nîpawistamâsowin: We will stand up [film]. National Film Board of Canada. 

     

    Read Literature by Indigenous Authors: 

    Billy-Ray Belcourt  

    Belcourt is an academic and poet from Driftpile Cree Nation. His poetry explores ideas around the queer Indigenous experience, and how Indigenous people deal with pain, violence, and grief, showcasing their resilience.  

    We suggest:  

    Belcourt, B.-R. (2017). The wound is a world. Frontenac House Ltd.  

    Belcourt, B.-R. (2019). NDN coping mechanisms: Notes from the field. House of Anansi Press Inc.  

    Leanne Betasamosake Simpson  

    Betasamosake Simpson is a Michi Saagiig Nishnaabeg scholar, writer, and artist. Her work uses Nishnaabeg intellectual practices, as she breaks apart the intersections of politics, story, and song.  

    We suggest:  

    Betasamosake Simpson, L. (2017). As we have always done: Indigenous freedom through radical resistance. University of Minnesota Press.  

    Betasamosake Simpson, L. (2020). Noopiming: The cure for white ladies. House of Anansi Press.  

    Glen Coulthard  

    Coulthard is a Yellowknives Dene associate professor in First Nations and Indigenous Studies and Political Science. In Red Skin, White Masks, he “seeks to reevaluate, reconstruct, and redeploy Indigenous cultural practices based on self-recognition rather than seeking appreciation from agents of colonialism.”  

    We suggest:  

    Coulthard, G. (2014). Red skin, white masks: Rejecting the colonial politics of recognition. University of Minnesota Press.  

    Michelle Good 

    Good is a member of Red Pheasant Cree Nation in Saskatchewan and was awarded the HarperCollins/UBC Prize for Best New Fiction in 2018. 

    We suggest:  

    Good, M. (2020). Five little Indians. Harper Perennial.  

    Thomas King  

    King is a writer of Cherokee, German, and Greek descent. He writes about Indigenous history, issues, and story in Canada and America. He pays particular attention to the ways in which policies have eroded Indigenous land and status rights.  

    We suggest:  

    King, T. (2012). The inconvenient Indian: A curious account of native people in North America. Doubleday Canada.  

    Dian Million  

    Million is Tanana Athabascan and a professor in American Indian studies. Million argues that Indigenous oral story telling “told about historical trauma, past and present victimization, and the search for redemption in personal and community healing,” and is therefore a valid form of theory. She also studies the politics of mental and physical health in relation to Indigenous communities and trauma.  

    We suggest:  

    Million, D. (2013). Therapeutic nations: Healing in an age of Indigenous human rights. University of Arizona Press.  

    Million, D. (2014). There is a river in me: Theory from life. In A. Simpson & A. Smith (Eds.), Theorizing Native Studies (pp. 31-42). Durham: Duke University Press.  

    Tanya Talaga  

    Talaga is an Anishinaabe journalist. Her book Seven Fallen Feathers investigates the alarming number of deaths of Indigenous youth in Thunder Bay, and how they are related to a legacy of human rights violations against Indigenous people. In All Our Relations, Talaga looks at how colonial separation of Indigenous people from their land, communities, and culture, affect social determinates of health and high suicide rates of Indigenous youth. These books are also a call for action, justice, and a better world for Indigenous peoples.  

    We suggest:  

    Talaga, T. (2017). Seven fallen feathers: Racism, death, and hard truths in a northern city. House of Anansi Press.  

    Talaga, T. (2018). All our relations: Finding the path forward. House of Anansi Press.  

    Jesse Thistle  

    Thistle is a Métis-Cree author and professor. His academic work explores Métis history, but he is best known for his recent memoir, From the Ashes. In this book, he explores his experiences with the foster care system, describing abuse, addiction, homelessness, racism, and cultural disconnection. He goes on to share how he turned his life around by learning about, and connecting with, his culture.  

    We suggest:  

    Thistle, J. (2019). From the ashes: My story of being Métis, homeless, and finding my way. Simon and Schuster.  

    Eve Tuck  

    Tuck in an Unangax̂ scholar whose research focus is on urban education and Indigenous studies. She focuses on how Indigenous social thought can be engaged to create more fair and just social policy, more meaningful social movements, and robust approaches to decolonization.  

    We suggest:  

    Tuck, E. & Yang, K. W. (2012). Decolonization is not a metaphor. Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, 1(1), 1–40.  

    Chelsea Vowel  

    Vowel is a Métis lawyer, academic, and author. Her work focuses on language, gender identity, and resurgence. She advocates for Indigenous language preservation, education reform, and Indigenous control of Indigenous education. Her blog, âpihtawikosisân, provides primer resources and “myth debunking” on Indigenous topics.  

    We suggest:  

    Vowel, C. (2016). Indigenous writes: A guide to First Nations, Métis, and Inuit issues in Canada. High-water Press.  

    Vowel, C. (n.d.). Indigenous issues 101. âpihtawikosisân. https://apihtawikosisan.com/aboriginal-issue-primers/  

    Richard Wagamese  

    Wagamese was an author and journalist from Wabaseemoong First Nation. His books explore Indigenous experiences in Canada; Indian Horse, for example, explores residential schools, abuse, racism, trauma, and how they relate to addiction.  

    We suggest:  

    Wagamese, R. (2008). One native life. Douglas and McIntyre.  

    Wagamese, R. (2013). Indian horse. Douglas and McIntyre. 

     

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  • Race, Identity, and Social Policy: Significant Works by Black Authors

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    By Jenn Rossiter and Sydney Sheloff

    February marks Black History Month, a time when we acknowledge the many achievements and contributions of Black Canadians and their communities throughout history in our province and the country as a whole.

     

    The Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC) is acutely aware of the evidence that shows that Black people in Canada, Alberta, and Edmonton face high rates of discrimination and racism. Alongside the efforts from many wonderful non-profits in the city, ESPC advocates for equitable social policies that affect under-served populations, including Black, Indigenous, and other racialized communities. Through this work, ESPC aims to support meaningful change and to champion the work that others are doing.

     

    In contribution to Black History Month, the following is a list of notable Black authors who have informed some of ESPC’s efforts in research and education—a few among many. We hope you take time to explore the valuable works produced by these authors.

     

    Desmond Cole

    A Toronto-based journalist and author, Cole resigned from the Toronto Star after being asked to choose between objective journalism and personal Black rights advocacy. His first novel, The Skin We’re In, explores racism in Toronto and how activists have resisted and fought for change in a variety of sectors.

     

    We suggest:

    Cole, D. (2020). The skin we’re in: A year of Black resistance and power. Doubleday Canada.

     

    Patricia Hill Collins

    Collins asserts that our position in the world informs our knowledge: Black women live in a very different world from women who are not Black, and thus have a very unique body of wisdom. People who experience oppression learn about it in acute ways and are in key positions to understand and critique it. Collins points to alternative forms of knowledge; Black people were often barred from institutions, and so would share their knowledge through music, poetry, and art.

     

    We suggest:

    Collins, P. H. (2000). Black feminist thought: Knowledge, consciousness, and the politics of empowerment. Routledge.

    Collins, P. H. (2004). Learning from the outsider within: The sociological significance of black feminist thought. Social Problems, 33(6), s14–s32. https://doi.org/10.2307/800672

     

    Afua Cooper

    Cooper is a Jamaican-born Canadian multidisciplinary scholar and author at Dalhousie University. Her research focuses on the often hidden history of slavery in Canada.

     

    We suggest:

     Cooper, A. (2006). The hanging of Angélique: The untold story of Canadian slavery and the burning of Old Montreal. Harper Perennial.

     

    Kimberlé Crenshaw

    Crenshaw is an American lawyer, civil rights advocate, philosopher, and leading scholar of critical race theory. She developed the theory of intersectionality, arguing that the experience of a Black woman cannot be understood by discrete analysis of being Black and being a woman, but must consider how all interactions are informed by composite identities within one person (social and political).  

     

    We suggest:

    Crenshaw, K. (1989). Demarginalizing the intersection of race a sex: A Black feminist critique of antidiscrimination doctrine, feminist theory and antiracist politics. University of Chicago Legal Forum, 1989(1),139–167.

    Crenshaw, K. (2017). Race liberalism and the deradicalization of racial reform. Harvard Law Review, 130(9), 2298–2319.

     

    Angela Davis

    Davis is an academic and political activist. She is well known for her work on prison abolition and was involved with the Black Power Movement and an all-Black branch of the communist party. Davis spent time in prison due to her activism, which affected her work on interrogating the criminal justice system. While Davis’ work focuses on the American justice system, her ideas have been heavily influential to Canadian scholars.

     

    We suggest:

    Davis, A. (1981). Women, race, and class. Vintage Books.

    Davis, A. (2003). Are prisons obsolete? Seven Stories Press.

     

    Frantz Fanon

    Fanon was a psychiatrist and political philosopher from Martinique, known for analyzing colonialism and decolonization through a psychoanalytic lens. His work was highly influential to the Civil Rights and Black Power movements, although he was never directly involved in either. His work The Wretched of the Earth provides a psychiatric and psychological analysis of the dehumanizing effects of colonization and discusses the broader social, cultural, and political implications of establishing a social movement for the decolonization of a people.

     

    We suggest:

    Fanon, F. (1963). The wretched of the earth. Grove Press.

    Fanon, F. (1967). Black skin: White masks. Grove Press.

     

    bell hooks

    The focus of hooks’ writing was the intersectionality of race, capitalism, and gender alongside their ability to produce and perpetuate systems of oppression and class domination. In Ain’t I a Woman hooks explored the low status of Black women, due to the intersection of race and gender oppression, in American society. She also examined the role of Black women and marginalization in the civil rights and suffragette movements.

     

    We suggest:

    hooks, b. (1981). Ain’t I a woman: Black women and feminism. South End Press.

    hooks, b. (1992). Black looks: race and representation. South End Press.

     

    Ibram X. Kendi

    Kendi is known for his book How to Be an Antiracist, in which he argues the only way to undo racism is to identify and dismantle it and the institutions that reinforce it. He is considered a leading scholar of race and discriminatory policy in America.

     

    We suggest:

    Kendi, I. X. (2016). Stamped from the beginning: The definitive history of racist ideas in America. Nation Books.

    Kendi, I. X. (2019). How to be an antiracist. One World.

     

    Audre Lorde

    Lorde was an American writer, feminist, and civil rights activist. Lorde articulated theory through poetry and discussed issues of race, class, age & ageism, as well as sex & sexuality. She also confronted racism that was apparent in mainstream “white” feminism.

     

    We suggest:

    Lorde, A. (1984). Sister outsider: Essays and speeches. Crossing Press.

    Lorde, A. (1995). The black unicorn: Poems. W. W. Norton & Company.

     

    Robyn Maynard

    Maynard is a Black Canadian feminist writer, educator, and activist. She traces the still-living legacy of slavery across multiple institutions, shedding light on the state’s role in perpetuating contemporary Black poverty and unemployment, racial profiling, law enforcement violence, incarceration, immigration detention, deportation, exploitative migrant labour practices, disproportionate child removal, and low graduation rates.

     

    We suggest:

    Maynard, R. (2017). Policing Black lives: State violence in Canada from slavery to the present. Fernwood Publishing.

     

    Rinaldo Walcott

    Walcott writes on a variety of topics, including Black diaspora cultural studies, gender, and sexuality. In his book Black Like Who? he assesses the role of Black Canadians in defining Canada; in BlackLife, he examines the ways in which the Canadian state ignores violence against Black people.

     

    We suggest:

    Walcott, R. (1997). Black like who? Insomniac Press.

    Walcott, R. & Abdillahi, I. (2019). BlackLife: Post-BLM and the struggle for freedom. Arbeiter Ring Publishing.

     

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  • fACTivist Feature Article: How Collecting Race-Based Data Can Address Systemic Racism in Public Education

    fACTivist Feature Article: How Collecting Race-Based Data Can Address Systemic Racism in Public Education

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    Note: this is excerpted from the Spring 2021 edition of our fACTivist publication. The Edmonton Social Planning Council, in collaboration with volunteers and colleagues within the sector, strives to provide stakeholders and community members with updates on ESPC’s activities and projects, including articles and initiatives that address a variety of pertinent issues that affect our community.

    Written by Michael Janz

    I commend the Edmonton Social Planning Council on their report, Confronting Racism with Data: Why Canada Needs Disaggregated Race-Based Data, which calls for disaggregated race-based data across Canada. Educational policies especially must consider how outcomes ranging from achievement, discipline, or attendance data are impacted by racism.

    As an 11-year Edmonton Public School Trustee, here are a few of my reflections for action for Edmonton Public Schools, Edmonton, and Alberta. As Edmonton Public Schools start to collect this data, public pressure will mount for Edmonton Catholic, Elk Island, Sherwood Park, Calgary, and other school districts to do the same. The ability to quantify the impacts of racial injustice, beyond anecdotal evidence, provides clear patterns and trends to support the need to create change and address the existing inequities through appropriate interventions.

    When You Know Better, You Can (and Should) Take Action to Do Better

    Race-based data allows the district to identify gaps in the delivery of education, which in turn will lead to the development of better programming to ensure student success. The areas are not restricted to achievement, discipline, and attendance. 

    In September 2020, Edmonton Public Schools became the first school jurisdiction in Alberta to commit to collecting race-based data. You can read the recommendation report that was passed unanimously by the Board of Trustees here. Trustees voted unanimously to collect the data with the intention to identify and address gaps that exist in education for racialized communities. We have heard these concerns from members of the community over a number of years about gaps and inequities, and now we are going to measure and act accordingly. 

    The Toronto District School Board has been collecting race-based data since 2006. Ontario began collecting data as a province in 2006. 

    Alberta School Boards are required to report on disaggregated student achievement data for students who self-identify as First Nations, Métis, or Inuit, but there is no broader collection of race-based data. This model has been billed as a significant undertaking and could take up to two years. Engagement is underway with community partners.

    Nothing About Us, Without Us

    We know that data can be misused, so conversations about communities impacted by racism—especially to protect family concerns regarding privacy and use of data—are essential. However, school boards have collected and reported on self-identified First Nations data for at least 20 years, as has Toronto and Ontario, so clearly there are working models that could allow us to move quickly.

    Additionally, we need to make sure that data is not misused with a deficit lens and that we do not run into the same problems we’ve seen with school rankings. The problem is not the students—the problem is the surrounding context. 

    Addressing Racism in Education

    In June 2020, the Board of Trustees released a statement acknowledging that racism and discrimination exist in our Division and we have work to do to address this. 

    We are undertaking a number of initiatives such as:

    • Pushing pause on the School Resource Officer program to study the impacts, as well as removing the armed, uniformed, police officers until further notice.
    • Developing a model to collect race-based data for students within the Edmonton Public School Board (EPSB).
    • Advocating to Minister of Education Adriana LaGrange to collect race-based data across Alberta.

    It is important to me and a number of other trustees that these measures are not limited to students, but that future boards implement greater disaggregated collection for staff and families as well.

    Maximizing Efficacy of Interventions

    With race-based data, you can target interventions and investments in strategies that support the students who need the most help. We know that funding cuts hurt our families, in particular the most vulnerable experiencing racism. Right now, in Edmonton Public Schools, we make certain budget decisions based on a neighbourhood social vulnerability index. We do not have the data to better target interventions based on varying intersections, such as socio-economics, race, and other factors. Many families are experiencing poverty—including refugee, Indigenous, and newcomer students and those from lower socio-economic areas that have disproportionately racialized populations. 

    Systemic Racism in Education Budgets

    When you look at the broken weighted average formula (which assigns more weight to recent data and less on past data) brought in by the provincial UCP government, fewer funds are flowing from the Legislature to the districts that are more urban and racially diverse. As a result, the students who need the most attention and support will be competing with a growing number of other students for a limited pool of money.

    Staffing and Leadership

    Edmonton’s student body and city are incredibly diverse; teaching staff, and particularly the administration, are less so. 

    Our staff pool is not reflective of that diversity, with visible minorities more represented in certain groups (custodial) than in teaching. Of school leadership, our principals are reflective of our teaching cohort and are not reflective of the racial diversity of the students and families they serve. Elected Public, Catholic, and Francophone School Trustees even less so. 

    Many big questions come to mind. Race and layoffs. Who do layoffs most affect? What can we do to increase the pool of available teachers at Concordia University or the University of Alberta? What are the barriers for completing high school in Edmonton and entering teacher college?

    Complex Solutions

    Seeds can’t grow in weeds and until we can pull out the weeds of poverty, racism, and injustice, the schools in our community garden will not truly flourish.

    A teacher can only impact a child for, at most, one-third of a day. Whether the child arrives at school ready to learn, is fed, properly clothed and supported, and can engage in learning has a dramatic impact on their ability to participate. Do they feel safe and that they belong at school? Did the transit police harass them on the way? Did the School Resource Officer profile them? After school, what opportunities for support, enrichment, or music can they experience? 

    Ending racism has been identified as one of the six game changers by End Poverty Edmonton. Data, including that collected and analyzed by the Edmonton Social Planning Council, clearly shows that there is a higher proportion of people of visible minority and Indigenous backgrounds experiencing poverty than other groups.

    Systemic Racism is One Thing, Actual Racism is Another

    Outside of our school buildings, we need actual enforcement of public safety for all of us. We need to prosecute hate crimes and not allow a dismissal by police services. Measures by municipalities can be taken to bylaws that ban racist symbols such as tiki torches at protests. If we can ban conversion therapy in Edmonton, surely we can put forward even stronger action to end racism and discrimination.

    Over the last decade, we’ve seen at EPSB enormous strides in our work to create a sense of belonging for sexual orientation and gender identity among our students, staff, and families. We need to build on, and do better with, an intersectional lens for all groups. 

    Beyond EPSB policies, we need provincial change. I put forward a motion in October 2020 (passed unanimously) for the provincial curriculum to be explicitly anti-racist and for funding, professional development, and anti-racism training to be available for teachers.

    The Next School Board Election

    Ask your school board trustees: are they going to demand disaggregated data from all orders of government? Are they willing to be thoughtful, open, and transparent about their own district operations?

    Conclusion

    Racism and discrimination exist in everything from policing to traffic safety. Recently the city of Portland, Oregon found a way to expedite safe streets because they realized (using data) that harm was disproportionately affecting people based on race and income. If race-based data can help us create safer streets, the potential for our classrooms are enormous.

    Michael Janz is a three-term trustee of Ward F for the Edmonton Public School Board.

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    Click on image to view online.

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  • 2005 (September) Sacred Heart Collective – An Effective Use of a Closed School

    Title:The sacred heart collective: an effective use of a closed school? : community experiences at the former Sacred Heart School in Edmonton, Alberta.
    Author(s):Atkey, Jill|split|Henshaw, Dianne
    Subject:Education – general|split|Urban issues – community development|split|Non-profit organizations – administration
    Publisher:Edmonton Social Planning Council
    Place of Publication:Edmonton
    Date of Publication:2005
    Language:English
     
    Material Type:Report

    K. EDUCATION/2005 (September) Sacred Heart Collective – An Effective Use of a Closed School.pdf