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Gabriel Dumont Institute

Coordinates: 52°7′45.52″N 106°42′34.49″W / 52.1293111°N 106.7095806°W / 52.1293111; -106.7095806
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52°7′45.52″N 106°42′34.49″W / 52.1293111°N 106.7095806°W / 52.1293111; -106.7095806

Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research Inc. (GDI)
Typepost secondary education Institute of native studies and applied research
Established1980
Executive DirectorGeordy McCaffrey
Undergraduatesin partnerships with various universities
Location, ,
CampusRegina Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Prince Albert, Saskatchewan
Coloursorange & purple
AffiliationsSaskatchewan Institute of Applied Science and Technology, ACCC, CCAA,
Websitewww.gdins.org

The Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research is a post-secondary educational institution in Saskatchewan, Canada. It is administered by and services the Métis population of Saskatchewan. The institute was designated as the official educational arm of the Métis Nation—Saskatchewan(MN-S).

Mission

The Gabriel Dumont Institute mission is to promote the renewal and the development of Métis culture through research, materials development, collections and the distribution of those materials and the development and delivery of Métis-specific educational programs and services.

Campus

The institute has multiple campuses in Regina, Saskatoon, and Prince Albert.

Governance

The Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research was formally incorporated as a non-profit corporation in 1980. The Institute serves the educational and cultural needs of the Saskatchewan Métis and Non-Status Indian community.

Partnerships

the Institute offers accredited educational, vocational and skills training opportunities for the province's Métis in partnership with the University of Regina, the University of Saskatchewan, the SIAST, the province's various regional colleges and the Metis Employment and Training of Saskatchewan Inc.

History

Gabriel Dumont

The Gabriel Dumont Institute takes its name from Gabriel Dumont, a renowned political and military leader of the Saskatchewan Métis in the nineteenth century. The Institute came about as a follow-up to a Métis Cultural Conference that initiated planning for what was then called the "Metis Education Institute." In 1980 the Gabriel Dumont Institute was formed and SUNTEP began its operations. This was also the year that the institute hosted the first Annual Cultural Conference. In 1983 the institute began federal sponsored preparatory, credit skills training, and university programs. In 1991 the Dumont Technical Institute was established as a federated institute of SIAST (Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science and Technology). In 1992 the institute expanded to be included in all provincial community colleges and SIAST's for technical and Adult Basic Education (ABE). In 1993 the institute signed an Affiliation Agreement with the University of Saskatchewan, thus creating the Gabriel Dumont College (GDC). In 1995 a two year Metis Teacher Associate Certificate Program was developed by the institute and the University of Saskatchewan. In 1996 GDC began to offer Arts and Science classes. Between 2001 and 2003 the institute began branching out, first by the DTI buying of a central administration building in Saskatoon, then by moving into more centres in Saskatoon and for the first time Regina.

Features & Awards

Some of the other advancements associated with the Gabriel Dumont Institute is the Napoleon LaFontaine Scholarship Foundation (1985), the publication of the Journal of Indigenous Studies (1989), the first Community Training Residence for female offenders (with Saskatchewan Justice)(1989), and Saskatchewan Book Awards for The Bulrush Helps the Pond(Ken Carriere, 2002), Metis Legacy (Lawrence J. Barkwell, Leah Dorion, Darren R. Prefontaine, 2001), Expressing Our Heritage: Metis Artistic Designs (Cheryl Troupe, 2003). In 2003 they also launched The Virtual Museum of Metis History and Culture.

Partnerships

Gabriel Dumont Institute maintains reciprocal arrangements with educational partners, including:

Programs

The first Gabriel Dumont Institute opened up with SUNTEP in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. Now it is in the three major urban centres in Saskatchewan: Regina, Saskatoon, and Prince Albert. It is the only institute of its kind in Canada. It provides a number of services:

  • Saskatchewan Urban Native Teacher Education Program (SUNTEP)
  • Gabriel Dumont College (GDC)
  • Dumont Technical Institute (GTI)
  • Bachelor of Education (SUNTEP, since 1980 about 650 educators trained)
  • Bachelor of Arts and Science (GDC, delivers only the first two years)
  • Adult Basic Education, skills training, vocational and cultural programs (DTI based)
  • Library Information Services (GDI, Metis Specific library system, Saskatoon, Regina, Prince Albert)
  • Curriculum and Publishing Department (based in Saskatoon, has produced over 75 literary, cultural and educational resources directed towards Metis')
  • Finance and Administration (Regina based, oversees institutes financial and personnel management)
  • Museum and Archives (Saskatoon centre, arts/crafts, oral histories, print, video, and audio archive collection)
  • The Virtual Museum of Metis History and Culture (to promote the sharing of its archives)
  • Metis Cultural Development Fund (partnership with SaskCulture Inc, funds activities for the community to strengthen Metis culture)
  • Scholarships (Gabriel Dumont Institute Scholarship Foundation: Napoleon LaFontaine Scholarships, and SaskEnergy Scholarships. provides applicants with access to secondary education)

See also

References

All facts, unless otherwise stated, are from Gabriel Dumont Institute's web site