Online Panel discussion: How can education systems in Atlantic Canada best respond to calls to combat systemic racism and to adopt anti-racist principles?

9th Annual Ottilia Chareka Memorial Lecture on Education and Social Justice

The UNB Faculty of Education will present the 9th Annual Ottilia Chareka Memorial Lecture on Education and Social Justice on Thursday, Oct. 29, from 7 – 8:30 p.m.

Panel discussion: How can education systems in Atlantic Canada best respond to calls to combat systemic racism and to adopt anti-racist principles?

All are invited to this free, public lecture. Facebook Live stream

Canadian civic discourse is permeated with deliberation about the reconciliation, or lack thereof, between Indigenous and Settler Peoples, systemic racism faced by people of colour in virtually all areas of life, and the growing ethno-cultural diversity of Canadian society. This panel will contribute to that discourse by examining these issues in the context of public schooling in Atlantic Canada. The panelists, all have personal and professional experience with public education in the region from primary school through graduate school and will draw on these experiences to propose possible responses in terms of policy and practice.

Moderator: Alicia Noreiga-Mundaroy is a PhD candidate in the Faulty of Education where she pursues studies in the field of rural education. She is currently UNB’s Graduate Student Association Vice-President (Academic) and the graduate student representative in the President’s Bi-Campus Committee for Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion.

Panelists:

Yao Bian is a relatively recent immigrant from China and a new Canadian citizen. She earned a PhD in history before coming to Canada and recently obtained her B.Ed. from UNB.  She is a supply teacher in the Anglophone West School district and a mother of two.

Sacha DeWolfe is a PhD student in the Faculty of Education at the University of New Brunswick.  She is a Dr Althea Warren Macaullay CFUW scholarship recipient (2018-19), Indspire’s Building Brighter Futures: Bursaries, Scholarships and Awards recipient (2018-19; 2019-20) and an O’Brien Fellowship recipient (2019-20).  The focus of her PhD research is investigating the social, political and historical factors contributing to her identity as a Mi’kmaq woman and how her life stories contribute to an expanded dialogue of Wabanaki identity.  Included in her dissertation is a documentary film which takes the audience on a journey from damage to desire.

Husoni Raymond is a recent graduate of St. Thomas University. Husoni is passionate about helping others and making a positive impact on his community through compassion and dedicated advocacy. During his time at St. Thomas, he organized numerous inaugural Black History Month events, using education as a tool to address anti-Black racism. Husoni is a founding member of Fredericton’s Black Lives Matter chapter and works as the Anti-racism Project Coordinator at the New Brunswick Multicultural Council.

Annual Ottilia Chareka Memorial Lecture on Education and Social Justice

Ottilia Chareka, mother, activist, scholar, mentor, and friend was a three time graduate of the Faculty of Education at the University of New Brunswick (DAUS 1993; M.Ed. 1994; PhD 2005). Ottilia was the first woman from her rural village in Zimbabwe to complete high school and went on from there to enjoy a stellar career as a teacher and academic. Throughout her life Ottilia was a considerable advocate for others including the many Zimbabwean girls she supported in educational endeavours, fellow immigrants to Canada, and the First Nations students she worked with at St. Francis Xavier University.

When Ottilia died tragically in the spring of 2011 the Faculty of Education at UNB chose to honour her with an annual lecture in her name focusing on education as a vehicle for social justice, something that was a life long passion for Ottilia. Ottilia is survived by her five daughters and a memorial fund has been set up by the St. FX Faculty of Education for her children. http://sites.stfx.ca/education/ottilia

Contact: Dr. Alan Sears, Honorary Research Professor, Faculty of Education asears@unb.ca

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.