The town of Puvirnituq, in Nunavik. (Toronto Globe and Mail photo)

The town of Puvirnituq, in Nunavik. (Toronto Globe and Mail photo)

Turnover among non-Inuit teachers is as high as 75 percent at Puvirnituq’s Iguarsivik school in the Hudson Bay area of Nunavik, and teachers say they’re fed up.

Iguarsivik teacher Pierre-Luc Bélisle tells Jane George of the Nunatsiaq News, here, that two students punched him in the stomach last month, and were back in school two days later:

    “I thought there would be some consequence. I didn’t invent a story about a student. I am there to protect them, for their security, it’s my job,” said Bélisle, who felt his credibility as a teacher was put in doubt. “I think that’s unacceptable.”

    After learning nothing had been done, Bélisle, who had already filed a police report on the incident, went to a doctor who put him on a two-week leave.

Belisle, who arrived last year, plans to leave at school year’s end.

As George reports, 15 of the school’s 21 teachers are non-Inuit. The school has about 260 students from Grade 4 to Secondary 5. Turnover is about 75 percent among the non-Inuit teachers, at least five of whom have taken leave to deal with injuries and trauma, she writes. As George further reports:

    In recent years, Nunavik has experienced growing violence in its schools and against its students and teachers.

    Countless episodes of vandalism, harassment and bullying in school classrooms and playgrounds have gone largely unreported.

    The most horrific episodes include the shooting of a female teacher in Salluit in 2005 and the severe beating of a school principal in Kangiqsujuaq that same year. …

    Over the years, Iguarsivik has faced other waves of violence. In 1993 the school and community were wracked by a series of violent incidents, which saw one teacher assaulted and several teachers’ homes vandalized.

    Then, in 2006, student vandals ransacked the school, causing hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages.

The school now has video surveillance, security entrance cards for staff, and hall monitors.

“The people who are losing out are the students,” says one teacher. “If we can’t help them, if there’s no follow-up by the administration, no program in the school against violence, how can we help educate the future citizens of Puvirnituq?”

Gwen Florio

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This entry was posted on Tuesday, May 11th, 2010 at 1:31 pm and is filed under Education, Inuit, Nunavik. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

2 comments so far

Michelle
 1 

These people all need a hug, loving words and the God that made them.
Its equal for those that got hurt and those that are sick enough to harm & hurt others.
To those that are ill, turn your lives over to your God and believe in only that is good.
To those that got harmed, your God will protect you, pray that the ill will be saved.

May 11th, 2010 at 2:08 pm
Old Griz
 2 

Get the parents involved in changing the violent culture which they most likely created in their home. The school needs a tough principal who will back each teacher through clear policy regarding each type of infraction and zero tolerance toward deviance and thug behavior. Parents must assume their responsibility or they need to use condoms. Old Griz

May 12th, 2010 at 6:11 pm

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