LHLC Sees First Graduate Click to Expand or Contract
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By Paul Mayne
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Deciding to go back to university in your late 30s may not be for
everyone.
But for Lisa Walker, who picked up her BA in sociology this past week
at The University of Western Ontario’s 296th Convocation, the learning
isn’t about to stop anytime soon.
“It’s more that I’m a life-long learner. Knowledge, I love it,” says
the 41-year old Goderich resident. “I feel the more you know the more
effective you can be. There’s a saying ‘We don’t stop learning because
we grow old; we grow old because we stop learning.’ So I figure I’ll
never grow old.”
While most students find themselves running from class-to-class on
campus, through the Lake Huron Learning Collaborative (LHLC), which
provides low-cost, accessible secondary education to residents of Huron
and Bruce counties, Walker did the majority of her learning online as
well as right in her own community.
It was in January 2004, when a group on interested residents of
Goderich formed a not-for-profit organization, which would soon become
the LHLC, a fully recognized, charitable organization that has formed
partnerships with local teachers, universities, colleges and professors.
By concentrating on the local environment – social and physical – it
promotes education for all residents whether they are completing high
school certificates, working on post-secondary degrees or taking
interest courses.
Over the past four years, Western has offered courses in Goderich and
Southampton, and most recently in Kincardine. Courses have been offered
in social sciences, biology, business and environmental studies.
Western writing program lecturer John Smallwood, who founded and
continues to head up the LHLC, says after many years of teaching in
secondary schools he realized he had taught a generation of students
who had the ability but, in many cases, not had the opportunity to
attend post-secondary institutions – often lacking the confidence or
funding to even consider further education.
“We have had some of the country’s best professors teach our students,
and the students have risen to the occasion,” Smallwood says. “The key
seems to be to have professors teach students face-to-face in smaller
classes. This gives first-time students who are not familiar with the
university system an opportunity to interact with their professors and
to gain the much-needed confidence.”
While several students will be graduating from the program over the
next year or so, Walker is the first to do so. The single mother of
three daughters – and four grandchildren – says she initially took a
single sociology course and the learning bug quickly took over.
She followed that with online course in the summer and a full
five-course fall class load, quitting her job in order to concentrate
fully on school. She applied for OSAP and bursaries to help with
finances and was working hard to make it work. She wasn’t going to take
no for an answer.
“It’s never been easy. Financially, it was a struggle, but I don’t let
anything stop me. I keep going until I find what I need,” she says.
Walker says the support she received from so many folks along the way
kept her going, such as her friendship with Donna Moore in the Student
Success Centre, and with Smallwood. “He’s been a huge supporter of
mine,” she says of Smallwood.
While she would love to do more schooling – wanting to pursue a
master’s degree – finances are the current stumbling block. But
Smallwood if the first to says Western hasn’t seen the last of Walker.
“Seeing Lisa graduate was a dream come true,” he says. “She has worked
very hard, taking every possible course that was available to her. She
has grown tremendously, gaining confidence as well as expertise in her
own field of study. Grads such as Lisa help to create a culture that
values and promotes post-secondary study in areas such as ours.”
In rural Ontario, having parents gain further education means their
children and grandchildren will be motivated to do the same, adds
Smallwood. So earning degrees as in Lisa's case will have long-term
results that go far beyond the obvious outcomes in having an individual
succeed in higher education.
Admittedly having struggles along the way, including the death of a
sister, Walker knew this was something she had to do – and not just for
herself. “I want to be able to empower other people, especially in my
community, to do something like this,” she says. “It gives you the
sense of accomplishment that sense of ‘Hey, I’m worth something, I know
something, I can contribute to my community.’”
Smallwood is hoping more individuals will being taking advantage of the
LHLC program. With some provincial funding has been cut for outreach
programming, it has meant fewer courses may be available to students in
the community, meaning more of the course delivery will be online.
“Real difficulties will ensue in our attracting new students who
greatly benefit from the small, introductory classes that create that
initial enthusiasm and interest,” he says.
To that fact, the LHLC recently received $500,000 from Ontario Power
Generation to assist us in creating a Centre for Learning in Kincardine.
“We continue to hope that an interest in doing lake-based research will
develop and that Huron and Bruce Counties can serve as centres for
environmental research in a time when water is the new oil and when
foreign species and water protection are foremost in the minds of many
who live on the Great Lakes.”