![UPEI makes Indigenous Studies course mandatory in order to graduate](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6547241.1660156334!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/david-varis-upei.jpg)
UPEI makes Indigenous Studies course mandatory in order to graduate
CBC
The University of Prince Edward Island will now require all graduating students to have completed a course in Indigenous Studies.
The course, part of the university's newly established Faculty of Indigenous Knowledge, Education, Research, and Applied Studies (IKERAS), is launching this fall.
Assistant professor David Varis, who is Cree and a member of the UPEI Indigenous Circle, says the Indigenous Teachings course will cover Indigenous history, cultures and practices.
"We will also be getting into some very heavy topics, such as trauma, intergenerational trauma as a result of residential schools. The Sixties Scoop," he said.
"However, we also talk about healing. And we talk a little bit about what's taking place across Turtle Island Indigenous Peoples, and how they're reclaiming their cultures."
Varis said the new mandatory course, as well as the IKERAS faculty, came out of the university's desire to find ways to support the 2015 Truth and Reconciliation Commission's calls to action, which included several recommendations around enhanced education on Indigenous history and residential schools.
"By just having a mandated course around Indigenous knowledge of peoples and their cultures, I believe that we are teaching responsible citizenship," he said.
The faculty — currently the smallest at UPEI — consists of four professors, including interim dean Gary L. Evans, as well as sessional instructors.
Evans, who is Métis, believes the IKERAS faculty is the first of its kind at a Canadian university.
"As far as I can tell, it's the first," said Evans. "We are not a department under anybody else. We are a full faculty. We sit at the dean's table with all the other deans. I would love to see this in every university. That is my goal."
He says it's now possible for students to minor in Indigenous Studies, and work is already underway to eventually offer an Indigenous major as well.
Evans says he's proud that in the years to come, every graduating student will leave UPEI with at least one course on Indigenous Peoples.
"We have failed to educate Canadians and international students and newcomers to the country on the true history of Canada," he said.
"And this is a chance to correct that, but it's also a chance to share the culture and the richness of Indigenous society."