We've had the focus on decolonization of our curriculum, but we've learned over the last few years that we're really looking for partnerships. As 4-H is a grassroots community development organization, we've worked with probably a dozen different communities over the last few years, and they've all been very different. Some of them have been very much focused on healthy food and not having access to it. Some of them have been focused on wanting their youth to just finish high school, and whether we can provide social support for that. It's really a wide variety of things.
Our approach has been to get to know the leaders in the community. In Six Nations, that was the community centre itself. In other communities, it's been the health centre, or in some communities it's been the band itself. So really, 4-H can offer so many tools to provide learning about agriculture and food that we have really taken a tailored approach to try to partner with those communities based on what their needs are.