Keewaytinook Okimakanak K-Net team members travelled to Rainy River First Nation last week to work with their staff in the development of their new community web portal. Click here to see the Rainy River First Nation web portal.
As well, the T1 connection installed as part of the First Nation SchoolNet video conferencing pilot project in their community library, was extended using a DSL connection to the Band Office. Rainy River First Nation is working with K-Net staff to identify strategies to extend their broadband connection to other organizations and community members. Pictures and more information about this work is available at http://firstnationschools.ca
National Chief Phil Fontaine from the Assembly of First Nations tried to get to the Keewaytinook Okimakanak Balmertown office today but the weather would not cooperate. Chief Fontaine and his team got as far as Winnipeg where the KO staff were able to work with the Keewatin Tribal Council's SchoolNet Regional Management Organization to have Chief Fontaine meet with the KO team via video conference. Along with the connections to the KO Balmertown office, the KO Sioux Lookout office, and the Manitoba RMO office, special guests from the Maori KWoR institute, Tom Winitana and Graeme Everton joined us from New Zealand to meet Chief Fontaine and share some of their work with KO.
A series of Briefing Notes on some of the ongoing work at Keewaytinook Okimakanak was presented to Chief Fontaine with the hope that he will work on behalf of Keewaytinook Okimakanak to address some of our issues on the following matters. Click on the topic below to see the PDF version of the briefing note delivered to Chief Fontaine during this video conference meeting:
One outcome from the meeting was a commitment from Chief Fontaine to complete his visit to Balmertown sometime in the next month.
The final report for Industry Canada's First Nations SchoolNet Native Language Conference that was held in Thunder Bay is now available on-line. The conference web site contains all the information package material that was distributed at the conference. Click here to visit the conference web site.
Click here to view the Final Conference Report. (1.09M pdf file)
The complete package contains the following appendices:
Jean-Francois Delorme (JF), with the Kativik Regional Government office in Kuujjuaq, arrived at K-Net's office in Sioux Lookout on April 28 and left on May 5. He spent the week working with Dan and Adi on the satellite portion of the Kuhkenah Network. JF and the K-Net team worked together to establish the necessary protocols and procedures for maintaining and supporting our respective partner communities and resources.
Sharing both technical and network development strategies is making it possible for these satellite-served, remote communities in two different regions of Canada (Northern Ontario and Northern Quebec) to share both the hub and network infrastructure as well as the technical expertise required to operate this satellite network. KRG recently was allocated 11mhz of bandwidth on Industry Canada's second public benefit transponder made available by Telesat as part of their agreement for specific orbital spectrum space. Click here to see the news story about this announcement.
The fourteen communities served by the Kativik Regional Government are each served by a C-Band satellite earthstation. They are receive their data connection through the K-Net earth station located in Sioux Lookout. Over the past two years, KRG has been building their network and applications using the K-Net portion of Industry Canada's C-band satellite public benefit resource (see http://smart.knet.ca/satellite for more information about this resource). With the addition of the KRG allocation along with our other partner (Keewatin Tribal Council) in Northern Manitoba, the combined satellite bandwidth resource will be able to be utilized to serve many of the different broadband applications being developed in the communities and these different regions (telehealth, education, justice, administration, etc).
George Ferreira, PhD Candidate, Rural Studies Program at the University of Guelph submitted his thesis Research Proposal to his committee for their review. George is proposing to work with Keewaytinook Okimakanak to complete his research entitled "VIDEO AS THE ORGANIZING STRUCTURE: A PROCESS MODEL FOR INTERACTIVE POLICY EVALUATION IN NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO’S REMOTE ABORIGINAL COMMUNITIES".
George also invited Brian Walmark, KO’s Policy Analyst who is working to develop the KO Research Institute to sit on this Thesis review committee.
From his thesis proposal ...
"… Conventional policy evaluation approaches may not capture the reality of life on the ground especially when one takes into account how much time it may take for change in livelihoods to become evident. Surveys, questionnaires and quantitative analysis designed for more homogenous urban and rural communities cannot meaningfully address the nature of change that policy decisions have in these disparate remote communities. This research focuses on developing new tools to enhance the evaluation process in order to provide policy makers with a better understanding of the local impacts of their decisions while simultaneously allowing the communities themselves to become active participants in the policy process by giving them the tools to tell their own stories. …
… As part of the SMART evaluation process, Industry Canada agreed to allow the use of video recordings and short documentary video productions into the evaluation process. New digital video technology allows remote communities, typically overlooked in the policy development process, a medium in which to collectively communicate their experiences with policy makers. …
… Video is a valuable tool for remote communities because it provides a means for contextualized, locally tailored messages in the absence of lobbying influence or access to mainstream media and advocacy. Video also offers a unique way of capturing interim changes in the context of long term policy-driven changes that are in progress yet defy quantification in the short term. For example, a survey may reveal that a certain proportion of households in a community is connected and go on to describe the types of internet applications being used. However, conventional methods fall short in their ability to predict medium and long term changes that will occur as a result of that particular practice. The SMART case in northwestern Ontario took place over three years in which time aspirations and future plans changed dramatically as applications due to connectivity, in virtually every sector of community life, were revealed and explored. Video, with its ability to record and relay contextualized human experiences allows policy makers a more tangible understanding of the real-life impacts of their decisions and initiatives.
… in the KO communities, a more community based, bottom-up approach is being pursued. In addition to the gathering of local stories around the connectivity experience as they relate to such subjects as health, education, economic development and community development, a training component was included so that the capacity to manipulate the medium was left in the community. Workshops in video production were conducted in each community’s e-centre with participation open to any interested community members. In addition, KO provided video cameras and multi-media editing stations to the communities to foster the ongoing production of video material by and about the communities. Communities have already begun producing their own stories and an online video archive site is presently under construction to provide them a global distribution system. …
RESEARCH QUESTIONS & OBJECTIVES
The research design set forth is inherently constructivist. Key to the constructivist approach is an acknowledgement that no single research question can guide the research without being modified as the researcher uncovers layers of previously hidden reality. The research question ensures that with each learning cycle the abstract conceptualizations contained therein remain within the realm of co-generalization.
Research Question: How does the introduction of ICTs to aboriginal communities empower them to change relationships with policy-makers, other aboriginal communities and each other?
Collectively, the objectives seek to describe the implications of ICTs and video as a tool for interactive policy making. The conditions required for participants (from the community level up to and including policy-makers) to view the use of video, not merely for the delivery of a pre-determined media product, but as a catalyst for community capacity building and interactive policy development will also be explored. The implications of locally directed media on the self-perception of aboriginal communities in relation to the larger dominant culture and policy-makers whose decisions rarely take into account the reality of life in these communities is particularly significant.
Objective 1: Determine the conditions under which of Information Communication Technologies (ICTs), in particular video can be used to develop capacity in aboriginal communities
Objective 2: Identify the processes that aboriginal communities develop and engage in order to produce communication materials to build capacity.
Objective 3: Determine how access to and control of ICTs and new media tools change the self-perception of remote aboriginal communities
Objective 4: Determine how access and control of ICTs and new media tools change relationship between remote aboriginal communities and urban policy makers.
Objective 5: Explore how policy makers identify the significance of new media tools and products to change their relationship with remote aboriginal communities.
The Ontario Native Education Counselling Association
YOUTH ESSAY CONTEST
CRITERIA:
Age 4 – 9 years: Create a poster showing things we can learn about our culture. Give a brief description as to why we should learn about our culture and the message your poster is trying to project.
Age 10 – 12 Write a one page essay double spaced on how you can be a positive role model to those around you. Why is it important?
Age 13- 15 Write a one page essay double spaced on someone who has been a positive role model in your life. Be sure to answer the Who? What? How, and Why.
Age 16 – 18 Write a 2 page essay double spaced about someone who has been a positive role model in your life. How has this person/persons influenced your life.
Special Needs Write a one page essay about someone who has been a positive role model in your life and how have they influenced your education.
Essays must be submitted double spaced and typed.
LAST DATE FOR SUBMISSIONS: JUNE 11, 2004
CASH PRIZES OF $100.00 FOR FIRST PLACE IN EACH AGE GROUP
Please send submissions to:
Essay Contest
Ontario Native Education Counselling Association
38 Reserve Road, Box 220
Naughton, Ontario P0M 2M0
For more information, contact ONECA at (705) 692-2999 or check out our website at www.oneca.com
Call to Artists deadline: May 20, 2004
Vendor confirmation: June 18, 2004
Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian
First Americans Festival Indian Art Market
September 21-26, 2004
Artisans from throughout the Western Hemisphere are invited to apply.
The National Museum of the American Indian and the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage announce a Call to Artists for the First Americans Festival Indian Market, September 21-26, 2004 in Washington, D.C. The Indian Market will be part of a six-day Festival that will feature over 400 performers and artists, and is expected to draw about 600,000 visitors. The National Museum of the American Indian is seeking as wide a representation as possible from arts and crafts vendors to display and sell works of Native arts and crafts from the U.S. (including Hawai'i), Canada, Central and South America, and the Caribbean.
The First Americans Festival Indian Market will be located on the terraces of the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum (NASM), which is adjacent to the National Mall, the Festival site, and the National Museum of the American Indian.
For information about the First Americans Festival, contact:
National Museum of the American Indian
470 L'Enfant Plaza SW, Suite 7103
Washington, DC 20024
Email: NMAIFestival@si.edu
Web site: www.americanindian.si.edu
There was a total of 56,467,159 hits occurring on five of the monitored K-Net servers over the month of April. The six servers generating this amount of traffic include myknet.org, knet.ca, webmail.knet.ca, highschool.knet.ca, and photos.knet.ca (just click on the server to see the traffic monitoring chart for each server). These hits were made by the 734,007 visitors to these servers during the month.
ATTENTION YOUNG WOMEN!
The Decade Office is sponsoring a "Girl Power" Train the Trainers symposium in May in Thunder Bay. If you are a young woman, between the ages of 18-29, residing in a NAN member community we may be looking for you. If you are interested in creating communities that are concerned with women's issues and are willing to organize activities in your community that will enhance women's status in our society, then you should apply to participate in this training.
The theme of this training is prevention of violence against women through leadership development. Participants will learn how to become proactive in breaking the cycle of young women's oppression. Upon completion of the training you will be able to speak up against social injustice and you will encourage other young women to do the same by organizing a Girl Power camp in your home community.
All travel, meals and accommodation are covered for the 10 young women chosen for this training.
If you are interested in participating please send a cover letter, a current resume and a statement outlining how you will organize a camp in your community to the symposium planner, Nita Quequish, at NAN by fax (807) 623-5819, email: coordinator@nandecade.ca or call 1-800-465-9952 for more information. The deadline to submit your application is May 7, 2004.
More info is also available on our website at www.nandecade.ca
Melanie Goodchild,
Decade for Youth & Development Coordinator
Nishnawbe Aski Nation
ph. (807) 623-8228
fax (807) 623-5819
email: mgoodchi@nan.on.ca
www.nandecade.ca
Please post this announcement. It is very important.
Osnaburgh (Mishkeegogamang) had the annual Hydro Settlement Payout in February of 2004. A lot of people have not come forward to claim any of their pay out and this needs to be taken care of as soon as possible.
If you or anyone you know belong to Osnaburgh band please contact Jeff Loon or Jeff Neekan at 807-928-2414 or 2148 during work hours. Thank you very much.