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A Blessing or a Burden?
- September 14, 2022
- Posted by: rcypadmin
- Category: Blog Posts
No CommentsBlack is not just a colour or shade but an identity. Growing up in a predominantly black country, I often wondered why my mother would tell my brother and me every morning before school that “Being Black is a blessing, and you are wonderfully made.” I thought this was strange because I lived in a
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The Forgotten
- April 14, 2022
- Posted by: rcypadmin
- Category: Blog Posts
I walk into the classroom as a new addition to an already existing system with nerves and excitement of first meetings, new beginnings, and strange surroundings. I look around me seeing a pool of similar skin tones varying in their subtleness and depth, but none that quite matches the colour of my own. I look
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My Relationship with Multiculturalism
- December 10, 2021
- Posted by: rcypadmin
- Category: Blog Posts
Young me always perceived multiculturalism as a positive term that encompasses inclusivity and promotes diversity. As a child, environments and institutions labelled as multicultural always prevailed in my eyes, extending their arms to populations and individuals seen as other, allowing them to express their culture and individuality openly. Today, with 15 years of experience, the
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Is It Enough?
- June 14, 2021
- Posted by: rcypadmin
- Category: Blog Posts
Looking back on my educational journey, I can count on one hand how many Black educational staff I have encountered in elementary and high school. Not only did this impact my experiences with mentors, but it also impacted the way I was treated in the education system. Without the presence of Black educational staff, there
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RCYP Team Statement on the Central American Caravans
- June 26, 2020
- Posted by: rcypadmin
- Category: Blog Posts
Central American Caravans The Central American borders have been overwhelmed in recent years by the phenomenon of the migrant caravans. While it is true that Central Americans have systematically fled the region since the eighties, what characterizes this new phenomenon is the way in which migrants have organized into caravans. These caravans are composed of
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Can COVID-19 change remote learning in Ontario?
- May 15, 2020
- Posted by: rcypadmin
- Category: Blog Posts
How much has your screen time shot up in the last few weeks? With ongoing COVID-19 physical distancing measures in place, our academic, professional and personal lives have migrated online. It is not only adults who are adjusting to this new daily routine, for the just-over 2 million students in Ontario’s English, French, public and
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Why study obstetrical violence in children and youth?
- May 5, 2020
- Posted by: rcypadmin
- Category: Blog Posts
Different Forms of Violence are faced by Children and Youth globally. The prevalence varies depending upon the study, however, current studies suggest that more than 50% of children in Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, and El Salvador experience physical abuse, verbal violence, sexual abuse or coercion and/or psychological abuse.1 The prevalence of sexual abuse survivors may be
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La colonialidad de la migración: Una revisión de las políticas migratorias estadounidenses en tiempos del coronavirus
- April 28, 2020
- Posted by: rcypadmin
- Category: Blog Posts
Actualmente, el mundo se encuentra en una crisis global provocada por la pandemia del virus COVID-19. Aunque este sea principalmente un problema de salud pública, los gobiernos de los distintos países están lidiando también con los efectos provocados en otras dimensiones de la realidad, como en lo social, lo económico y lo político. Ejemplo de
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FACT SHEET: How do participant experiences help us to understand institutional practices?
- January 31, 2020
- Posted by: rcypadmin
- Category: Blog Posts
When youth agree to sit down for an interview with a member of the RCYP team, they might be wondering what we do with our research, and what we do with their stories. We’ve created this infographic to demystify the RCYP project, the questions that we ask during interviews/focus groups, and the “institutions” that
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Shifting the Self-Care Paradigm
- January 18, 2020
- Posted by: rcypadmin
- Category: Blog Posts
Ryerson University has hosted Social Justice Week for the past nine years. The events act to facilitate conversations around social justice practices and ways that students and the community can engage. One event brought to light an exciting topic: self-care for social work practitioners. The area of self-care for social service practitioners has limited research
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