Where are you From? Reframing Facilitated Admissions Policies in the Faculty of Health Sciences

IF 0.4 Q3 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY Aboriginal Policy Studies Pub Date : 2020-12-18 DOI:10.5663/aps.v9i1.29359
Danielle N. Soucy, Cornelia Wieman
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Abstract

Understanding that Indigenous learners can face specific barriers or challenges when pursuing higher education, schools and programs within McMaster’s Faculty of Health Sciences have facilitated admissions streams for Indigenous (First Nations, Métis, and Inuit) applicants. The intent of reframing admissions policies is to provide equitable access while aligning with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s Calls to Action, specifically Number 23. This work explores the development of an Indigenous-determined Facilitated Indigenous Admissions Program (FIAP), a self-identification policy that moves away from the politics of mathematical blood quantum to nationhood, community, and seeing the applicant as whole being. Further, it critiques (for example) medical school admissions as biased, in that they often replicate an elite and narrow segment of society. It also addresses how interpretations of decisions like Daniels v Canada, which speaks to the rights of Métis and non-status Indigenous peoples, are communicated or miscommunicated within emerging population groups in terms of rights and their potential relationship to admissions.
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你来自哪里?重塑健康科学学院的便利招生政策
了解到土著学习者在接受高等教育时可能面临特定的障碍或挑战,麦克马斯特健康科学学院内的学校和项目为土著(原住民、梅蒂斯人和因纽特人)申请人的录取流提供了便利。重新制定招生政策的目的是提供公平的入学机会,同时与加拿大真相与和解委员会的行动呼吁,特别是第23号行动呼吁保持一致。这项工作探索了由土著人决定的促进土著招生计划(FIAP)的发展,这是一项自我认同政策,从数学血量的政治转向国家、社区和看待申请人的整体。此外,它批评(例如)医学院招生有偏见,因为它们往往复制了社会中精英和狭隘的阶层。它还讨论了对Daniels诉加拿大案等涉及梅蒂人和无地位土著人民权利的裁决的解释,在新兴人口群体中如何在权利及其与录取的潜在关系方面进行沟通或沟通不畅。
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来源期刊
Aboriginal Policy Studies
Aboriginal Policy Studies SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
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