The National - News

Canadian teacher awarded $1m prize

Winner champions girls’ life chances in Arctic school

- The National staff

DUBAI // A Canadian teacher has been awarded a US$1 million (Dh3.67m) for her work with indigenous communitie­s at a ceremony in Dubai. Maggie MacDonnell, from Ikusik School in Salluit, northern Quebec, was given the Varkey Foundation Global Teacher Prize for her role in improving school attendance rates and girls’ registrati­on at the school, located in the Inuit region of Nunavik. Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, presented Ms MacDonnell with the award on the final day of the Global Education and Skills Forum at the Atlantis, The Palm hotel.

“I would like to invite my students to share this award, as I have won this not for them but with them,” Ms MacDonnell said. Ms MacDonnell has taught in the Canadian Arctic for six years. Winter temperatur­es are as low as -25°C and schools in remote areas there face high rates of teacher turnover, as well as drug abuse, self-harm and teenage pregnancy among pupils.

Aiming to turn the problems into solutions, Ms MacDonnell created a life-skills programme for girls that helped the school achieve a 500 per cent improvemen­t in girls registrati­on. She dramatical­ly improved attendance rates by getting pupils involved in running a community kitchen, attending suicide prevention training and hiking through national parks.

She has also been a temporary foster parent to children in the area, including some of her own pupils.

In a video message broadcast at the ceremony, Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau congratula­ted Ms MacDonnell “on behalf of all Canadians, from one teacher to another”.

“You chose to teach at the Ikusik school in Salluit, a remote village in the Canadian Arctic,” Mr Trudeau said.

“There are no roads to Salluit – it is only accessible by air and it gets cold, really cold.

“I would like to say thank you to every teacher out there. Teachers owe responsibi­lities to many people – to students, to parents, to the community and the school board.

“But in the end, as all great teachers know, they are ultimately responsibl­e to something far greater.

“They are responsibl­e to the future and for the world that will be shaped by the children they teach.”

The Global Teacher Prize was set up to recognise an exceptiona­l teacher who has made an outstandin­g contributi­on to the profession.

Sunny Varkey, founder of the Varkey Foundation and of Gems Education, hoped Ms MacDonnell’s story “will inspire those looking to enter the teaching profession and also shine a powerful spotlight on the incredible work teachers do all over the world every day”.

 ?? Martin Dokoupil / AP Photo ?? Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, presents a Global Teacher Prize worth $1 million to Canadian schoolteac­her Maggie MacDonnell.
Martin Dokoupil / AP Photo Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, presents a Global Teacher Prize worth $1 million to Canadian schoolteac­her Maggie MacDonnell.

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