Waterloo Region Record

‘A lot to offer’: Plans afoot for at least one Arctic university

- BOB WEBER

The world’s only northern nation without some form of Arctic university may soon have three of them.

There are plans in all three of Canada’s territorie­s to give their residents a better shot at higher education.

Yukon, the Northwest Territorie­s and Nunavut all have different approaches but similar goals.

All want to give their youth a chance to learn without having to travel thousands of kilometres. All want to focus on the needs of their particular jurisdicti­ons.

And all believe the North has characteri­stics — from language diversity to climate change — that could make an Arctic university a draw for students and researcher­s from around the globe. “We have a lot to offer,” said Caroline Cochrane, the N.W.T’s minister of education.

The idea of a northern university has been kicked around since at least 2007 when a panterrito­rial survey found residents wanted more influence over Arctic research. Northern First Nations have been asking for one for 50 years.

Arctic colleges offer northern students degree programs such as education and nursing. But the programs are run and degrees awarded by southern institutio­ns.

Now, northerner­s are taking control of their own post-secondary education. Yukon is likely to be first out of the academic gate.

“We’ve got three degrees lined up,” said Karen Barnes, president of Yukon College, soon to be Yukon University.

This September, the institutio­n will offer its first three bachelor’s programs under its own name instead of those brokered through another university.

One will be in Indigenous governance, taking advantage of expertise in Yukon’s 11 self-governing First Nations. The second will be a business degree focused on operating in remote communitie­s.

The third will be in northern studies — traditiona­l knowledge, culture, history and current situation of northerner­s.

“A lot of universiti­es have offered degrees in northern studies but this will be the first one actually offered in the North,” said Barnes.

Also this fall, the N.W.T. legislatur­e will consider an extensive report on the territory’s Aurora College that recommends a Northern Canada Polytechni­c University that would combine bachelor’s and applied studies with a community college to support secondary schools. A search is on for someone to lead that transition, said Cochrane.

“I think a university is needed within the N.W.T.,” she said.

The Eastern Arctic is also moving ahead.

By October, Nunavut Arctic College hopes to announce a partnershi­p with a southern institutio­n.

It wants to broaden the college’s current offerings with a view toward the administra­tive needs of government and the technical requiremen­ts of the resource industry.

Eleven southern universiti­es have applied to be that partner, said Jesse Jacobs, the college’s director of planning.

“What we’re really looking for in a partner institutio­n is to take Inuit traditiona­l knowledge and ensure that we are able to put it into credential­s that are recognized nationally,” he said.

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