Ottawa announces funding for digital education of N.S. Indigenous children
HALIFAX — Indigenous children in Nova Scotia are set to learn coding and other digital skills, in an initiative one business leader says he hopes will “open up doors” beyond the reserve for Mi’kmaq students.
“Jobs on reserves are very limited. I want these children to look beyond and to explore opportunities,” said Chris Googoo, chief operating officer of Ulnooweg Development Group.
“If they’re thinking they want to be an engineer or in animation, they can look for jobs everywhere and not just on reserves.”
Federal cabinet minister Scott Brison on Tuesday announced $1 million for Ulnooweg — an organization in Millbrook First Nation that will teach 8,700 Mi’kmaq students coding, robotics, big data, 3D modelling and animation.