Organizations working to encourage more women, girls into skilled trades
CBC
Several organizations in Sudbury are working to help encourage more women and young girls into skilled trades.
Across Canada, only about five per cent of skilled trades workers are women, according to Statistics Canada.
One of the organizations, Skills Ontario, partners with school boards, colleges, small businesses, large companies, labour groups, and governments to provide opportunities for young people to explore and develop skills for successful careers in the skilled trades and technologies.
For the first time since the pandemic began, Skills Ontario plans to hold its first in-person International Day of the Girl, planned for Oct. 11 at Science North in Sudbury. About 180 Grade 7 and 8 girls from the Sudbury area will learn about and explore job possibilities.
It includes the 'For Girls, By Girls' conference featuring keynote speaker Kendra Liinamaa of Sudbury, who is currently doing her apprenticeship to become a millwright. There will also be workshops that allow students to test out various trades.
Some students already have preconceived ideas about trades jobs, but this event works to change that, said Lindsay Chester, the program manager for Skills Ontario's Young Women's Initiatives.
"Change that stigma, change that mindset and give them an opportunity to try these different skilled trades careers and then in the end leave realizing that this is something that they are capable of doing, and then hopefully sparking enough of an interest that they continue to pursue that through high school and ultimately into a career down the road" she said.
Chester said it's important for female students and young women first entering the trades to see visual representation of other workers like them.
"When we have the female tradeswomen, now the girls can kind of be like 'Alright if she can do it I can do it,'" Chester said.
Cambrian College is holding a similar event at the end of this month called Jill of All Trades. Female high school students will be able to try out various trades and learn about viable career paths.
"What we try to do with this is just give them a taste of the skilled trades for a day," said college spokesperson Dan Lessard.
Cambrian also has female instructors within its various trades programs — who become role models for the female students.
"Don't let your perception of what you think girls can or can not do prevent you from exploring a really good career in the trades; that is going to be rewarding, is going to be challenging and quite frankly it's going to pay you really good money," Lessard said.
This year there are 294 female students enrolled in Cambrian's Skilled Trades and Engineering Technology; ten more than in 2021.