Indigenous Knowledge Training
Wed Oct 23, 2024 9:00 AM - Thu Oct 24, 2024 4:00 PM
Marymound Training Centre, 442 Scotia Street
Description
This is a two-day workshop for counsellors, school professionals and educators, service providers, early childhood educators, and family service workers.
In this two-day workshop participants will gain and understanding of Canada’s history of colonial policies and their impact on Indigenous peoples, families, and communities.
Participants will also expand their knowledge of cultural safety practices, how to provide culturally relevant services, and build culturally respectful workplaces.
Indigenous worldviews, knowledge systems, and spiritual and cultural values will be shared.
This workshop is experiential and will include ceremony.
- Registration Fee: $249 per person
- Max Capacity: 15 persons
- Length: 2 Days (7 Hours each)
- Date(s): June 25 & 26, 2024
- Start Time: 9:00 a.m.
- Facilitators: Dawn Isaac, Chantel St. Germaine, Priscilla Meeches
Dawn Isaac |
Dawn Isaac is Anishinaabe-ikwe from Sagkeeng First Nation. She holds a bachelor’s degree in human Ecology and a Masters degree in applied communications. She has several years of experience in research & training with a focus on intergenerational, developmental, and organizational trauma as well as Indigenous issues in both a historical and current context. She is passionate about promoting a wide-spread understanding of trauma-informed and trauma-responsive services as a best practice approach across multiple sectors. Dawn is also committed to advancing Indigenous knowledge(s), resilience, healing practices, and creating safe spaces, as well as fostering reconciliatory relationship building. Dawn spent more than a decade working as part of an intergenerational team (grandmother-mother-granddaughter) facilitating workshops and healing sessions on intergenerational trauma and resilience. Through this transfer of knowledge, she has been part of an interdisciplinary team developing a Reconciled Healing Model as an overarching clinical framework for organizations in the healing and helping profession. Dawn has also worked closely with Dr. Sandra Bloom, to pilot Creating Presence; a new and innovative clinical approach to transform organizations and foster trauma-resilient practices. |
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Chantel St. Germaine is a proud Indigenous woman who has a great amount of passion for what she does. Chantel brings forward a Bachelor Degree in History, and teaches our youth the importance of Indigenous culture and Culture Identity. Chantel is also a crafter and teaches our youth how to make Ribbon skirts, beading, drums, rattles, traditional foods, attends ceremonies with the youth and so much more. She takes pride in who she is as an Indigenous woman and passes her knowledge and teachings on in a respectable and honest way. Outside Marymound she also carries out cultural workshops for different organizations and enjoys attending ceremonies with her children. |
Location
Marymound Training Centre, 442 Scotia Street