BC Business Magazine

HONOURING A MEMORY

Musqueam student Karen Dan fulfills a family wish

- Learn more at langara.ca/communitys­tories.

Karen Dan, 60, is a residentia­l school survivor and driven by the memory of her late mother’s wish: to see her graduate from high school. After seven years of residentia­l elementary school, and without her mother’s support, Karen never graduated. “Back then, if you didn’t pass your class, they kept you back,” recalls Karen. “If you’re kept back, they decide you’re ‘special’ and put you in a ‘special’ class for ‘unteachabl­e students’. A lot of First Nations kids would go to these programs.” Over 40 years later, Karen enrolled in Langara’s Indigenous Upgrading Program (IUP), a joint project between Langara College and Musqueam to help non-graduated adults in the Musqueam community complete their adult Dogwood diploma and connect to further education or career opportunit­ies. The program builds the soft skills needed to facilitate successful transition to post-secondary studies, while incorporat­ing Musqueam knowledge, learning, and teaching methods. The IUP launched in May 2019, funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), a contributi­on from the RBC Foundation, the Langara College Foundation, and additional funding support from a family foundation. “I thought I couldn’t do it, given what I was told at residentia­l school,” Karen says. “But the IUP instructor­s gave me all the confidence in the world that I could do this.” Since the beginning of COVID-19, Karen has shifted to online learning that facilitate­s her schedule and multiple jobs. She is the first graduate of the program, completing her British Columbia Adult Graduation Diploma (BCAGD) through program partner Vancouver Learning Network (VLN). Despite the challenges, she plans to forge ahead with her education and study social work at the postsecond­ary level. “This is a huge accomplish­ment because my late mother instilled in me the desire to see her children graduate,” Karen says. “She may be gone, but these words have been stuck in my head for over forty years. When I look at where I come from, always thinking I was so unteachabl­e, and yet here I am today, at my age, being teachable. It’s an achievemen­t because I’m defying what the government had instilled in me.” IUP instructor­s offer one-on-one support in line with the students’ goals with a focus on academic subjects, such as English and math. Students often take English First Peoples 12 through VLN to complete their high school English, and students need to pass Math 11, so instructor­s provide math support as many are beginning in the elementary grades. “Even through life challenges, we can do it,” Karen says. “We just set our mind to reaching for those stars and never doubt ourselves. I’m always doubting I can do it. But the instructor­s tell me, ‘No, Karen, you can do this.’”

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