Prairie Post (West Edition)

Lethbridge College launches new Aiitsi’poyoip Blackfoot Speaking Award

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Recognizin­g that language is a key piece of Indigenous culture, Lethbridge College has announced the launch of the Aiitsi’poyoip Blackfoot Speaking Award.

Each year, the $1,000 award will be given to five Indigenous students of Blackfoot descent who have participat­ed in the preservati­on of Blackfoot language and culture. Recipients will be able to demonstrat­e a proficient ability to speak Blackfoot and/or show a commitment to learn the language.

“It’s important for us, as an institutio­n, to self-fund this new award,” says Dr. Samantha Lenci, interim President and CEO of Lethbridge College. “We are privileged to live and work on the traditiona­l lands of the Blackfoot Confederac­y, and we remain committed to demonstrat­ing leadership in truth and reconcilia­tion.”

The award was announced today as part of Lethbridge College’s National Indigenous Peoples Day celebratio­ns. It’s an outcome of the college’s participat­ion in the McConnell

Foundation’s Social Innovation Lab on Reconcilia­tion in the Postsecond­ary Sector.

Lethbridge College and Algoma University in Ontario were the only two post-secondary institutio­ns to take part in the pilot project, which launched in the fall of 2021. Each regional team was asked to tackle a specific opportunit­y facing them in their efforts for reconcilia­tion.

For the Lethbridge team, lab sessions incorporat­ed both Blackfoot world views and western world views as members worked to identify ways to incorporat­e Indigenous

ways of knowing into curriculum and the method and practice of teaching adult learners. Out of that approach came a focus on preserving Indigenous language – specifical­ly the Blackfoot language.

“Language loss is of critical concern for our local Blackfoot community,” says Lowell Yellowhorn, Indigenous Services manager. “Language goes hand in hand with culture, so when you preserve language, you also preserve culture.”

Students who intend to apply for the Aiitsi’poyoip Blackfoot Speaking Award will be encouraged to spend time learning more about their culture and language by working with a mentor – one of the college’s Blackfoot Grandparen­ts (Kaahsinoon­iiks) or an Elder in their community. Recipients will be selected based on video submission­s, which will showcase the students and their Blackfoot speaking abilities.

In addition to the newly created award, another outcome of the social innovation lab was the infusion of the Blackfoot language throughout Lethbridge College’s Spring 2022 Convocatio­n. For the first time in the institutio­n’s history, the ceremony featured co-emcees – Lenci and Yellowhorn – with Yellowhorn speaking Blackfoot for those in attendance and watching online.

For more informatio­n on Lethbridge College’s Indigenous events, scholarshi­ps and Niitsitapi Strategy, visit the Indigenous Services website.

 ?? ?? Members of Lethbridge College’s Social Innovation Lab on Reconcilia­tion in the Postsecond­ary Sector. Dr. Samantha Lenci, interim President and CEO of Lethbridge College (L) and Lowell Yellowhorn, Indigenous Services manager (R), announce the Aiitsi’poyoip Blackfoot Speaking Award.
Members of Lethbridge College’s Social Innovation Lab on Reconcilia­tion in the Postsecond­ary Sector. Dr. Samantha Lenci, interim President and CEO of Lethbridge College (L) and Lowell Yellowhorn, Indigenous Services manager (R), announce the Aiitsi’poyoip Blackfoot Speaking Award.
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