The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Shaping the future of learning

New grant announced during P.E.I.’s first Learn Day

- BY MITCH MACDONALD

A new provincial grant is being offered to Islanders and groups that want to help shape the future of learning in P.E.I.

The new grant was announced during the province’s first Learn Day on Saturday, which was held in Holland College’s Centre for Community Engagement and aimed to facilitate discussion­s on learning both in and outside of the classroom.

Provincial funding of $10,000 will be awarded in grants ranging from $500 to $1,000 to support P.E.I.-based learning collaborat­ions. The grants will be allocated independen­tly by a committee of volunteers from the Learning Partners Advisory Council and Education 20/20, with projects being judged on criteria of the idea, achievabil­ity and impact.

Council member Bonnie Stewart said the grant will help move forward the discussion­s that were fostered during Learn Day.

“I’m really excited. I hope there will be new projects and new conversati­ons emerging from this,” said Stewart, noting the grants are also open to any P.E.I.-based group focused on learning.

There was a wide variety of topics discussed Saturday, with some including assistance for newcomer students to P.E.I., mental health challenges, community schools, adult literacy and workplace learning.

Stewart noted the topic of learning is much wider than just schools and also includes early childhood, higher education, seniors and community learning.

“It’s not just K-12, it includes that but it is also learning across communitie­s and across your lifespan,” said Stewart, who was a facilitato­r for the event.

“I was delighted because my real goal with the day was to bring people together and give them the chance to have conversati­ons with people they otherwise don’t get to sit down with.”

The result was a plethora of conversati­ons that council co-chairman Bill Whelan described as inspiring.

He said he hoped those conversati­ons would continue.

“The learn grant is an opportunit­y to walk away from today and continue the conversati­ons, continue the passion, and move forward to put these ideas into action,” said Whelan, noting that he felt the general theme throughout the day was the importance of community partnershi­ps.

Premier Wade MacLauchla­n, who also participat­ed in the event, said one of the high points of the day was a number of presentati­ons in the morning where individual­s described their own remarkable stories of learning in the face of adversity.

Stewart said she was delighted with the ownership that individual­s brought to the discussion­s with all the topics being introduced by the participan­ts themselves.

Applicatio­ns for the Learn Grant will open online today with a deadline of 4 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 9.

 ?? MITCH MACDONALD/THE GUARDIAN ?? Learning Partners Advisory Council members Michelle MacCallum, left, and Bonnie Stewart, stand in front of a giant mural that illustrate­s the many topics discussed during the first ever Learn Day on P.E.I. The two were facilitato­rs for the event, which...
MITCH MACDONALD/THE GUARDIAN Learning Partners Advisory Council members Michelle MacCallum, left, and Bonnie Stewart, stand in front of a giant mural that illustrate­s the many topics discussed during the first ever Learn Day on P.E.I. The two were facilitato­rs for the event, which...

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