Thank you very much.
Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee.
My name is Michèle Clarke. I'm the director of government relations and policy research at the Association of Canadian Community Colleges. We appreciate the opportunity to provide input to the committee's study on skills development in rural and remote communities. I am accompanied today by my colleague, Suzanne Taschereau, who is responsible for our essential skills initiatives.
ACCC is the national and international voice of Canada's 150 colleges, institutes, university colleges, polytechnics, and CEGEPs. With campuses in 1,000 urban, rural, and remote communities, these institutions draw students equally from all socio-economic quarters.
Our presentation today focuses on the roles colleges play in improving skills development in remote rural communities. We will identify some of the barriers to effective skills development, and share innovative approaches and practices on how colleges work closely with business, industry, and community employers to meet their education and training requirements to foster business innovation, and to enhance access to post-secondary education and training.
Colleges and institutes have extensive reach across Canada's remote rural communities. They are often the only post-secondary institution in the area, and are a valuable resource in providing rural and remote Canadians with equitable access to post-secondary education and skills training. Our three colleges in the territories have main campuses as well as extensive networks of learning centres serving small communities. Aurora College, for example, has 24 learning centres. These colleges serve as hubs of community response and local socio-economic well-being. They offer innovative programming and service delivery modes to facilitate access to post-secondary education, to support innovation, and to improve productivity of rural small and medium-sized enterprises.
As noted in the Canadian Chamber of Commerce report “The Business Case for Investing in Canada's Remote Communities”, current education funding models disadvantage rural communities. The confusing complexity and prevalence of many different types of financial assistance mechanisms for post-secondary education often discourages learners from participating in post-secondary education. Colleges are often faced with having to piece together funding sources tied to the eligibility criteria for which different learners are eligible. In many cases the funding does not address other challenges, such as geographical and transportation needs, access to child care, and learning support services. Offering a wide array of wraparound support services to ensure learners succeed in transition to the employment market is critical. However, delivering effective student support services in rural areas is more complex and costly.
A significant proportion of the adult population in rural and remote communities is under-prepared academically to participate in post-secondary and skills training programs. In small towns and rural areas, high school dropout rates for youth are twice those in metropolitan areas. Moreover, the shift towards a knowledge-based economy will require advanced and essential employability skills, such as document comprehension, critical thinking, and problem solving. We welcomed the initiative announced in the June 2011 budget to expand territorial colleges' literacy and numeracy programs. Colleges' experience with adult upgrading and essential skills development is a key part of the solution to providing people living in remote rural communities with transferable skills for employment.
ACCC is working with HRSDC to increase the employability of aboriginal people, newcomers to Canada, unskilled workers, and the unemployed currently excluded from the labour market. A national framework will be created to support their essential skills development, including an integrated process to essential skills development and a national repository of essential skills resources.
Relatively modest investments in upgrading essential skills, like those just mentioned, can yield significant gains in productivity. Providing current and meaningful information about career development and related skills development opportunities is also essential. The Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technologies, in partnership with Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada, offers the mobile career coach program to Saskatchewan first nations communities. Two recreational vehicles were retrofitted and equipped with Internet capability, laptops, and office space to allow staff and participants to comfortably engage in mobile career services.
Distance education is particularly effective for serving learners in remote rural areas. Nunavut Arctic College used the knowledge infrastructure program funding to develop a cyber system to expand programs offered by distance and online, in particular by brokering programs from post-secondary institutions in the south.
Alberta-North has 87 community access points offering distance education programs from five northern Alberta colleges, and Contact North is a network of 94 access centres in northern Ontario, linking students to colleges and universities via computer imaging and supporting interaction between faculty and students. These services are expensive.
Education and training in first nations reserves are also critical. Over 80 colleges deliver programs in aboriginal communities in partnership with first nations bands or with aboriginal-controlled institutes. The Northern Alberta Institute of Technology, Red River College in Manitoba, Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science and Technology, and the Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technologies operate mobile labs for programs for automotive service technicians, carpenters, electricians, plumbers, and welders, to name a few.
ACCC is partnering with Noront Mines, the Aboriginal Human Resource Council, and a consortium of colleges to explore a potential model for aboriginal employment and business development in the Ring of Fire. The model will feature performance-based programming in two streams, one for employment in trades in the construction and mining sector and the other in business development.
Colleges not only align their education and training programs with the needs of employers through program advisory committees but also provide them with applied research and development support.
College applied research focuses on solving problems for local businesses and helping them to survive and thrive by adopting new technologies and by launching new and improved products and processes. College research institutes such as the Yukon Research Centre and the Aurora Research Institute are developing marketable cold-weather tools, gas hydrate production technology, and Arctic Internet connectivity. College applied research activities produce highly qualified graduates with real-world challenges, hands-on training with leading-edge technologies, contact with industry, and advanced skills training in all sectors of the economy.
The Canadian Chamber of Commerce report highlighted the need for a federal strategy to be founded on strong research about the economic potential that exists in Canada's remote communities.
An ACCC research project on college-led rural knowledge clusters, funded by the Rural and Co-operatives Secretariat, confirmed that colleges are key players in rural system amenities and facilitators of innovation and creative industries. ACCC continues to explore opportunities with the Rural and Co-operatives Secretariat to undertake research projects to examine the role of colleges and institutes as catalysts of the creative rural economy.
We invite the committee to take note of our brief, which will be submitted on December 13. We thank the committee for giving us this opportunity, and my colleague Suzanne and I would be pleased to answer any questions the committee may have.