Author: charliebringloe6
âThe economy, industry and moderate wants of every member of the householdâ-Canniff Haight
- Guidelines of a rural family and a working class family
Rural Family
- Household economy
- The whole family is the provider including mother, father, and children
Urban Family
- Father is the provider
- Mother is the home management
- Children are a financial burden
Working Class Urban Families
- Children meet the demands of city life
- âYoungsters as wage earnersâ
- Children 7-14
- Work outside industrial and commercial
- No wages but still provided importance to families
Urbanization
- Canada’s urban population increase 3X the rate of the general population in nineteenth century
- Came from
- Vistums of land ehsation
- Exclusionary inheritance customs
- Immigrant families settling in Canadian cities hoping to escape poverty
- Father and older sons immigrated first and family members followed as employment and living was found
- Different environment and value system from rural life
- Materialism, competition, standardization, consumption
- Fear of unemployment
- Winter increase costs of fuel and food
- Working class homes
- Children assume domestic responsibilities
- Began with keep up of the home
- Sweeping steps, washing windows, scrubbing floors
- Making repairs to the home when the father is away
- Gathering coal and wood for fuel
- Fetch water from wells
- Cultivated gardens
- Raised and slaughtered animals
- Sell cultivated food to other families
- Provide care for ill family members
- Children would fill in the role of a deceased parent
- Older children babysat the younger children
- Responsibilities based on sex
- Females
- Babysat, housekeeping
- Tasks inside the home
- Males
- Tasks outside home
- Females
- Began with keep up of the home
- Children assume domestic responsibilities
- Sweatshop system
- Tiny workplace part of home
- Predominantly female workers
- Produce saleable materials for large retail or wholesale outlets
- Of 324 married females, 272 worked at home
- Being able to watch children and work
- Alexander Whyte Wright investigated the sweating system of canada
- Found kids working 60 hr a week
- Employers paid by the piece
- Discouraged rest periods
- Mackenzie King
- Carried out government clothing contracts
- Made my girls and women in homes or shops hired by subcontractors
- Private homes had the harshest working conditions
- Shop workers brought their work home to be finished by family members
- Clothing contracts violating privacy of working class holmes
- Long hours of labour for little in return
- Middle men
- Create harsher conditions with less pay
- Child Workers
- Families would rent out rooms for stay
- Children had to clean r0oms and wash sheets
- Delivered landry and food to other people
- Street Trades (700 youngsters)
- Polish shoes
- Sold old newspapers
- Pencils, shoe laces, fruit
- Children begged for money
- Teenage prostitution
- Newsboys stood out
- Families would rent out rooms for stay
-
- Newsboys
- Some lived in boarding houses
- Boys became providers of the house from this job
- Sold newspapers on the streets
- Earned 60 cent to 1 dollar a day
- Lead to petty crime
- Turned into irresponsible adults
- 1890 streetboys needed to apply for licence
- Require clean criminal records
- Newsboys
- Foster Children
- Orphaned children were sent to farms
- Farms aspects would develop moral and industrious habits
- Children as servants
- Ability to perform around the house would account to their placement
- Girls 12 and boys 14 should become self-supporting
- Betweens this children can work domestic services for pay
- Servents
- Paid 2$ to 9$ a month depending on service
- Orphaned children were sent to farms
- Education
- Kids were given free educations
- However children didnât go due to economic responsibilities
- 1,632 children between 5-16 did not attend school
- Middle and upper class children posttest regular attendance
- 16.1% of kids worked at home
- 27.7% were full time workers
- Mandatory attendance laws came in place in 1871 and strengthened from 1881-1891
- Middle and upper class children were at an advantage as working class children weren’t able to go to class
- Began to provide working class kids the ability to go to school
- White collar jobs grew into the 1900s
- Education became more important in finding jobs to improve class
- Working class families receive special consideration from school boards whose kids are economic responsibilities
- Physical education and health programs were created in late 1880s which were missed by students who didn’t attend school
- Sweatshop children workers or home workers had little job training which did not provide advancements in later years
- Social legislation and reform movements were made
- Sert standard for social conduct
- Children’s Aid society
- Rescues children from poverty and places them in foster care
Bibliography
Bullen, John. “Hidden Workers: Child Labour and the Family Economy in Late Nineteenth-Century Urban Ontario.” Labour / Le Travail 18 (1986): 163-87. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25142677.
Boys in the Nova Scotia Cole Mines
- 11-15 years old
- Respectful but small in stature
- From 1880-1890 percentage of boys in the mine rose from 17.1-21.5 %
- Boys were employed because of their size to do certain tasks
- Labour for boys was cheap
- Halling coals
- 14-17 years of age
- On all fours to pull coal
- Trappers
- Less than 10 years old
- Doors were made to allow ventilation into the building
- Boys experiences in mine
- Moves up the ladder of jobs
- Trapper, driver, miner
- Death in the mines
- Explosions
- Moves up the ladder of jobs
- Average pay
- 65 cents a day
- 50 cent less than adults
- Provincial Workmen’s Association
- System of âapprenticeshipâ to protect coal mine as a skilled labour
- This brought the question of child labour
- Unfair advantages were given to adults over boys due to age and not the ability to perform tasks
- 1890 acknowledge importance of education for mining
- Mst be older than 12
- Ability to read
- 1923 boys must be older than 16 to work in mines
- Strikes
- Boys have the power to shut down mines if they go on strike
- Recreational Strikes
- Ability to take time off to play sports
- First strike was do to the payment boys were receiving for doing work
- Boys and Alcohol
- Drunken colliery boys were reported
- 2 boys were jailed due to being âdrunk and disorderlyâ
- Free Schools Act
- Children between 6-16 had to go to school for at least 120 days a year
- If not parents were fined, or jailed
- Exemptions were made to those with 12 or older with grade seven education or 13 or older with indispensable income
- Mines
- Boys without a grade seven education and between 12-16 were not able to work in the mines
- Children between 6-16 had to go to school for at least 120 days a year
- Nova Scotia Mining community
- 1888 minimum age of 12 to mine
Bibliography
Mcintosh R. (1987). The Boys in the Nova Scotian Coal Mines: 1873-1923. Acadiensis, 16(2), 35-50. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/30302726
Free Education
- Came in the School Act of 1850
- To bring more children to school
- Children are able to benefit from education
- School age population grew from 61.2% in 1851 to 86.4% in 1871
- Population was misleading
- Kids were not always going to schools
- Jobs, moving to other cities,
- Student population attending class dropped from a total population of 423,033 to 38,535 actually attending school
- âIrregularity of attendanceâ
- Scared of juvenile crime
- Kids who went to school less had lower grades
- âCriminal apathy and negligence of parentsâ
- Associated with the working class and poor
- Farming parents
- Attendance influenced by
- Climatic conditions
- More kids went to school in the winter
- More boys attended than girls (for 3 months)
- Girls were left home to take care of family when it was too cold to go outside
- Summer
- More girls went to school than boys
- More kids went to school in the winter
- Bad roads
- sickness
- Climatic conditions
- Kids were not always going to schools
- Opponents of free education
- Helped increase irregularity of attendance
- If they paid they would have to go, if they didnt they wouldn’t want to go
- Helped increase irregularity of attendance
- Appreciation of Educations
- Culture didn’t care for education in Ontario
- Children were able to work at a younger age in factories
- Curriculum didnât teach children to learn real life knowledge
Work
- Work patterns
- Work more so that times of winter or depression would still be economically stable
- Agricultural labourers (farmers) had become poor if their crops failed
- Winter
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- Poverty came in the winter when swelled ranks of unemployed in cities and stopped farming in the rural areas
- People who worked outside were laid off during the winter
- People who worked in the winter had subsidized wages
- Food and fuel was more expensive at this time
- Poverty came in the winter when swelled ranks of unemployed in cities and stopped farming in the rural areas
Bibliography
Davey, Ian. âThe Rhythm of Work and the Rhythm of School.â In Nancy Janovicek and Joy Parr (Eds.),Histories of Canadian Children and Youth, Toronto: Oxford University Press, 2003:
Evolution of age categories in American Society
- Pre-school, primary, and secondary school, college
- Progressive, rigid, precise, uniform, and prescriptive
- Children embrace adolescence and adult behaviour
- Adults mimic styles and fashion of the young
Age
Chronological Marker
- Sign posts measuring progress through life
Subject Experience
- Weighs on mind as people get older and older
American Society
- cognitive , emotional, and physiological stages of development
System of power and hierarchy
- Legal rights (vote, marry, drink, and smoke)
- Legal consequences (offences that can be committed under 18)
Historians
Dynamic, Diachronic Approach
- How age categories and age consciousness shift over time
Contemporary Societies
- Earlier society and amorphous age categories
What does age mean?
- Intense age category of mid-twentieth century
Is age being lost?
- Losing organization category in the twenty first century
Social and cultural context intersect with social organization and social difference
Attentiveness to class, ethnicity and gender
- Age coexist
Issues in the Young People’s Competency and Maturity
- Capital punishment
- Youthful offenders
- Contraceptives and Abortion
- Custody decisions
Gender: A useful category of historical analysis
Gender is an important category of historical analysis
Socially constructed meanings, ideas, and assumptions
Challenge materialist and psychoanalytical approach to gender
- Dimension of normative, symbolic, institutional, subjective, and preformative
Advantages
- Problematised historians vocabulary
- More attentiveness to agency
- Compare and contrast gender to categories of difference and oppression
Age and Gender
Gender and age has changed over time
Cultural System
Age is not natural
- Imbued with cultural assumptions, meaning and values
Social and cultural construct meaning
- Attributed with particular age categories
System of power relationships
- Aspects of social organization
- Difference in age are organised along historical lines
Age Categories
- Embedded in personal relationships
- Institutional structuring
- Social practices
- Law
- Public policy
- Politics
Gender and age function culturally, socially and psychologically
Age is fluid
- Variation wider
- Change after time (age categories and consciousness)
Gender
- Shapes life course even in culture that emphasizes gender equality
Age is modified by class, ethnicity, gender, nationality and religion
Biology of aging changes in ways gender does not
- Age is less fixed than gender
- Age category are malleable
- Age does not define individual identity
Bibliography
Mintz, Steven. “Reflections on Age as a Category of Historical Analysis.” The Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth 1, no. 1 (2007): 91-94. Accessed January 10, 2019. doi:10.1353/hcy.2008.0003.
History 3510: History of Childhood and Education have been very beneficial towards my overall view of education in Canada. Â Personally, I enjoyed taking the time through my research project to learn about the Residential schooling system in Canada. Â I found me research to be very surprising as I have not learned about the Residential school system until this class. From the information I learned through Canada’s educational history I found that even today it has flaws which need to be exploited in order for students to gain a better education.
The most important topics have been Traditional vs. Progressive education and Social control vs. Social concern. Â Throughout the course I have developed a great source of knowledge towards these two main topics which I have been able to relate towards my Research project and other assignments throughout the course. Â
Traditional education has been acknowledged as a ‘black and white’ form of education. Â This means that the education style oriented basic programs which allow students to develop a proper education and successful job in life. Â
Progressive education allows students to develop skill which can broaden their learning and ability to face challenges throughout their lives. Â These skills involve problem solving, critical thinking, and leadership.
Social control has been implemented into Canadian society through government programs to establish and society view on certain values. Â Social control began with Egerton Ryerson implemented of educational systems to create political socialization in Canada (McDonald 2012). Â
Social concern had been implemented into Canadian society to help decrease any social risking that society may face. Â Social concern has been implemented into education to develop important Canadian values of its students.
Through class discussions, presentations and readings I have developed a clear understand of course content which has been executed through my research proposal, primary source, presentation and paper. Â
Bibliography
McDonald, Neil, âEgerton Ryerson and the School as an Agent of Political Socialization,â in Sara Burke and Patrice Milewski (Eds.), Schooling in Transition: Readings in the Canadian History of Education, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2012: 39-56.
For my English 2200: Sport Literature class I had written my final paper which compared and contrasted Richard Wagames “Indian Horse with the Soiux Lookout Black Hawks. Â Although this paper was written for a different class, I found the relationship with my research paper was simular.
Transitioning into a Canadian Identity: Assimilating Residential School Students through Hockey
Sport was introduced into Residential Schools in the 1940âs and 50âs in hopes of assimilating Aboriginal students into the Canadian way of life (Hiwi 85). Â The sport which exemplified Canadian culture the most was hockey. In Richard Wagamese âIndian Horseâ and Braden Te Hiwi and Janice Forsythâs ââA Rink at This School Is Almost as Essential as a Classroom: Hockey and Discipline at Pelican Lake Indian Residential School, 1945-1951â the sport of hockey is identified as a way to transition Aboriginal Students from their own culture to a Canadian colonized culture (Te Hiwi 83). Â Muscular Christianity was taught from playing hockey as Aboriginal players could learn the proper morals that came from the sport. For Aboriginal student-athletes, hockey became an safe haven where playing the sport allowed students to escape the abuse in Residential schools. However, hockey became a platform to showcase Aboriginals assimilation to Canada identity, which caused incidents of racism from white fans and reporters. The sport of hockey in the Residential school system showcased Aboriginal assimilation and transitioning into a Canadian identity.
The residential schools at Pelican Lake and St. Jeromeâs treat hockey as a kind of âMuscular Christianityâ where their belief is âthe development of good Christians through sport and games by instilling character traits such as courage, toughness, self-reliance, and sportsmanship in athletesâ (Hiwi 86). Â Boys of Pelican Lake Residential School specifically were introduced into hockey to fulfill the Christianized and Canadian identity. Pelican Lake Residential School developed into the Sioux Lookout Blackhawks and would excel in Muscular Christianity as the Bantam team would go on to become the Thunder Bay District Champions. Â However, to excel or graduate from the hockey program, they had to exemplify behaviour depicted by their opponent as showcased by ââit was the first hockey team which had ever behaved properly!ââ (Hiwi 95). Similarly, hockey was implemented into the Residential School in âIndian Horseâ as an attempt to achieve Muscular Christianity. Â Saul Indian Horse uses the sport of hockey to progress his values and morals to create a Canadian identity. When the opportunity arose to graduate St. Jerome’s Residential School, he would have the ability to integrate into a colonized life: âhe will have the benefit of a good home and good schooling. We will have achieved our missionâ (Wagamese 96). Â The importance of achieving Muscular Christianity from Saul Indian Horse and the Sioux Lookout Blackhawks would be beneficial in the Churches and Governments perspective as they transitioned into a Canadian identity.
Life in Residential Schools became a place savagery as the church tried to expel the Savagery of Aboriginal students. Â Savagery came through the form of sexual, psychological and physical abuse from the nuns, priests and teachers who were in charge. Â Livelihood of Aboriginal Students in Residential schools came to the point where students had taken means into their own hands. Throughout Richard Wagamese âIndian Horseâ, Â Saul returns to past memories of students he saw take their lives due to the abuse that was given in St. Jerome’s Residential School. Throughout his years at St. Jerome’s he had used hockey in the way the school intended the sport for him: to assimilate into Canadian culture. Â Hockey had integrated Saul into Canadian culture so the teachers did not have to. Sauls school life at St. Jeromeâs was contrasting to other students as he was able to escape abuse due to his ability to perform on the ice. His hockey career created an identity which Saul could follow in order escape Residential School life: âIn the spirit of hockey I believed I had found a community, a shelter and a haven from everything bleak and ugly in the worldâ (Wagamese 90). Â Similar to Saul, sports at the Pelican Lake Residential gave students an opportunity to escape their school life: â[sport] made their lives more bearable and gave them a sense of identity, accomplishment, and prideâ (Habkirk 3). These aspects of sport were sought after at Pelican Lake where many students would practice their hockey skills with hopes of making the Blackhawks (Hiwi 95). In addition, Hockey’s popularity came as a way for students to escape their students life and explore sport to cope with the abuse Residential schools have created (Habkirk 3). Â Travel had been intriguing part of the Hockey team where players would have the opportunity to leave School for a period of time to compete. The time spent away from residential schools allowed the student/athletes to reset from their school life and focus on Hockey instead. The implementation of Hockey in Residential schools had created a safe-haven for students to use sport to escape the abuse from the teachers in the school. However, escaping the abuse through Hockey still provided a transition into a Canadian identity.
Showcasing Aboriginal athlete playing Hockey against white, Canadian athletes proved to Canada that assimilation of Aboriginals to Canadian culture had been transitioning. Â However, Hockey in Residential school faced racism from the Canadian population in order to create separation of the two peoples. Although Hockey was enforced in the transition to make Aboriginals into Canadians, hockey was still an aspect of Canada which Canadians took seriously. Â When Saul left St. Jeromeâs to play for the Moose, he would find that assimilation to Canadian culture would not change Canadians perceptions of Aboriginals. The Moose faced many accounts of racism as they were depicted as âothersâ and their Hockey skills surpassed the âwhite guysâ (Wagamese 118). Â For Canadian fans, their views towards the diversity on the ice would be made clear towards the Aboriginal teams: âThe crowd reacted whenever he read out a particularly Indian-sounding name, shouting out jibes and tauntsâ (Wagamese 124). Similar to the Moose, the Blackhawks performances caught Canadians off guard as the team would exhibit high end skills on the ice. Â However, reporting on the Blackhawks performance would never surpass the cultural view that they were still Aboriginals: ââthere was no scalping, rough-house or angry words. Just clean play, goodwill all around and smiles, especially Indian smilesâ (Hiwi 100). However, the Blackhawks would have their performance exploited by the Churches and Government in an approach to prove the assimilation to Canadian culture. Â Examining the Aboriginal athletes assimilation to Canadian culture was showcased as the Blackhawks would enter a three game tour which broadcasted the Aboriginal team playing White teams. Throughout the tournament, media coverage would prove the government and churches role in the Residential School systems helped transition Aboriginal Students to assimilation into a Canadian identity: âThe Blackhawks could engage Canadiansâ interest in hockey, show the success of residential schools, and offered visible proof that First Nations peoples could compete against whites on equal termsâ (Hiwi 97). Â The Blackhawks created a platform for the Government and Churches to showcase and exploit Aboriginals of their assimilation to Canadian identity. Since Aboriginal students had begun transitioning into a Canadian identity, Canadians and Aboriginals would now be equal. However, the acceptance of the transition of Aboriginals students into Canadian culture would cease to exist at this time as Aboriginals experienced racism from Canadians.
In Richard Wagamese âIndian Horseâ and Braden Te Hiwi and Janice Forsythâs ââA Rink at This School Is Almost as Essential as a Classroom: Hockey and Discipline at Pelican Lake Indian Residential School, 1945-1951â the sport of Hockey in the Residential School system showcased Aboriginal assimilation and transitioning into a Canadian identity. Â Muscular Christianity was identified from Hockey as Aboriginal players could learn the proper morals that came from the sport. For Aboriginal student-athletes, hockey became an safe-haven where playing the sport allowed students to escape the abuse in Residential schools. However, Hockey became a platform to showcase Aboriginal students assimilation to Canada identity from Residential schools. Â In conclusion, Residential schools have used the sport of hockey to transition and assimilate Aboriginals students into a Canadian identity.
Works Cited
Habkirk, Evan J, and Janice Forsyth. âTruth, Reconciliation, and the Politics of the Body in Indian Residential School History.â ActiveHistory.ca, 27 Jan. 2016, activehistory.ca/papers/truth-reconciliation-and-the-politics-of-the-body-in-indian-residential-school-history/.
Te Hiwi, Braden, and Janice Forsyth. ââA Rink at This School Is Almost as Essential as a Classroomâ: Hockey and Discipline at Pelican Lake Indian Residential School, 1945-1951.â Canadian Journal of History, vol. 52, no. 1, Spring/Summer 2017, pp. 80â108. EBSCOhost, doi:10.3138/cjh.ach.52.1.04.
Wagamese, Richard. Indian Horse: a Novel. Douglas & McIntyre, 2018.
The following notes come from Robert Stamp’s âGrowing Up Progressive? Part I: Going to Elementary School in 1940s Ontarioâ and âGrowing Up Progressive? Part II : Going to High School in 1950s Ontario.” Â
Grade 1
- Envisioning students working together in a social environment
- âActivities and experiences rather than knowledge and factsâ
- Controlled environment for learning
- Sit in rows
- Raise hand when have questions
- Female teachers who get married must leave profession with their maiden name
Grade 2
- Activity oriented learning environment
- Suggested rather than prescribed
- Develop complexity in learning (dive deeper into literary works)
Grade 3
- Developing bad student habits due to the unpreparedness of the young teacher
- Learn a vast majority of things in one particular subject, Writing. Â
- Not enough time spent on writing for children to learn themselves
Grade 4
- Teaching becomes individual
- Working on specific skills which can progress children
Grade 5
- Learning through teachers values and opinions
- Leads children to fabricate reporting
- Writing through new tool (ink pen)
Grade 6
- Learning created through the works of music which the teacher has created
Grade 7
- This grade blends the old teaching which creates social studies
- Learning the economics and social construction of adult life
Grade 8
- First male teacher
- Activity based learning is a primary focus which has been distributed by the teacher. Â
- Learning math and real world knowledge for students to pass their high school entry exam (Traditional curriculum is put in place)
Grade 9
McArthur Curriculum
- Common First year
- More amount of options for learning
- matriculation, technical, or commercial program
- Occupations course
- Teaching students proper study habits
- âa year of testing…in which the boy can try himself out along different lines under the guidance and direction of teachers, that he might reach conclusions regarding his particular capabilities and aptitudes.â(Stamp)
- Elimination of latin
- Created tension among older teachers due to previous apretitations of the course
Grade 10
- Girls and boys are split on trades jobs
- Girls are more typing communication jobs
- Boys are hands on manufacturing jobs
- Curriculum becomes more challenging as the workload becomes heavier
- Intermediate diploma comes from those you pass grade 10
- âmaking our academic schools less academic and our vocational schools less vocational, in other words to provide all secondary schools a kind of general education which will fit our adolescents for life â as individuals, as citizens, and as workers.â(Stamp)
Grade 11 and 12
- Begin to make choices on jobs post school
- 90% of communicational jobs are of women
- Technical educations move those to another school
- Science is split up grade 11 physics and 12 chemistry
- Completing grade 12 gives your high school diploma
Grade 13
- ontario Secondary School Honours Graduation Diploma or âSenior Matric.
- Fewer students make it to grade 13 (35 of 150 students from grade 9-13)
- â13A is all boys, heavy on mathematics, physics and chemistry.â (Stamp)
- â13B is mixed gender, emphasizing biology, history and Latin. Both classes take huge doses of English and French.â(Stamp)
- Exams fill most of the school years as students are tested rigorously on their knowledge
- Provincial wide exams are sent out to school for students to complete
- Toronto creates the exam for the students
- Getting PC on your jacket was the most important part of your school career
- Principal praising students of their knowledge from education
Hi, my name is Charlie Bringloe and welcome to my History 3510 ePortfolio. Â I would like to take this time to introduce myself to you.
I am currently a fourth year at Thompson Rivers University, originally from Waterloo, Ontario. Â I came to Kamloops after I had finished high school on a volleyball scholarship to TRU. I am currently a fourth year in the General Studies Program with aspiration of entering the education after completing my degree.
I took this course to gain better knowledge on the History of Childhood and Education as I see this would benefit my knowledge of teaching. Â For my research project I choose to look at the Physical Education System in Residential Schools from the late 1800’s to mid 1900’s. My reason for this area of work is due to my passion for sports and activities, and also my family history of the Residential school system. Â
I hope this ePortfolio provides you with new information that attends you to the History 3510 Childhood and Education course! Â Â
An assignment to compose your own life story came after the reading from Mary Cathernine Bateson’s “Composing a Life Story.” Â The purpose was to compose a life story regarding an aspect of you’re life growing up. Â What has always been apart of my life is sports and activities. Â This story analyses how my life has been developed through sports and activities. Â Enjoy!
At a young age it became apparent that I was going to be involved in sports throughout my life. Â Looking back at home videos of christmas morning my first gift was a basketball and hoop. My childhood consisted of riding bikes, playing basketball, skiing and snowboarding, and engaging in water sports in the summer. Â In kindergarten they asked us to draw what we wanted to be when we grew up; I drew a dirt bike racer. As I began to grow into a pre-pubescent stage I picked up the sport of baseball. I found my tall stature and hand-eye coordination allowed me to succeed in the sport at a young age. Â At the dinner table parents would ask what I wanted to be when I grew up; similar to before I had said profession baseball player or snowboarder. Getting into my teenage year I left the sport of baseball to pursue the sport of Volleyball. I noticed the skills I learned in baseball when pitching helped me spike harder than my other teammates who had picked up the sport at the same time as I. Â My progression in volleyball grew and grew as I competed on the top teams in Canada and playing for the provincial team in the summer. As I became closer to graduation high school I found myself at the dinner table with people asking what I was going to do post high school. My answer still hasnât changed. With volleyball scholarships to various universities in Canada I was given the opportunity to continue playing the sport I love while continuing an education which can give me a fallback plan if continuing my athletics runs out.
Iâve found the ability of pursuing goals in sports throughout my childhood to benefit myself as I make my way into adulthood. Â However, as I grow up Iâve realized my dreams are beginning to come true.