Published: 27 Jun 2024 221 views
The Indigenous Students is open for application to Indigenous Studentst planning to enter the 1st year of a Canadian public, post-secondary education institution, full-time or part-time, in the coming year.
The National Union is different from most unions; it has a federated structure – in effect, it’s a union of unions. Individuals are members of the National Union through their membership in one of our components. The Triennial Convention, with delegates from all components, is the supreme governing body. Between conventions, the National Union’s governing body is the National Executive Board, which comes from the leadership of all the components..The office of the National Union of Public and General Employees is on the traditional and unceded territory of the Algonquin peopl... continue reading
The financial package of this scholarship will be made known to the recipient at a later date
To apply for a scholarship you must meet all of the following requirements:
Confirming your Indigenous identity for this scholarship
For the purpose of this scholarship, an Indigenous person (the legal term is Aboriginal person) in Canada, as recognized in the Constitution Act, 1982, is a person who identifies as First Nations (Status/Non-Status), Métis, or Inuit.
Indigenous identity data is collected solely to determine scholarship eligibility. Indigenous identity data will be stored on a secure server and retained for a period of 5 years, after which time it will be destroyed. Indigenous identity data will not be sold or distributed.
Please note that scholarship winners will have their names and the name of the scholarship they won published online, but details about status, membership, etc. will not be shared.
There are 2 options to confirm your Indigenous identity for this scholarship.
Option 1 — Legal documentation. You must provide one of the following:
For First Nations applicants
You must provide one of the following:
For Métis applicants
You must provide one of the following:
For Inuit applicants
You must provide a copy of an Inuit membership card issued by any one of the 4 Inuit Treaty Organizations or Governments that are covered by the Inuit Nunangat Policy:
For all applicants (voluntary)
In addition to any one of the types of legal documentation listed above, all applicants are welcome to submit an alternative identity term (e.g., Kanien’kehá:ka, Anishinaabe, Treaty #3, etc.) with their application.
Please note that membership to pan-Indigenous organizations will not be recognized.
Option 2 — Candidate self-declaration
If a candidate does not possess proof of the documentation listed in Option 1, they must submit a statement (minimum 200 words) about their lived experiences and ongoing relationship to a legally recognized Indigenous community, Nation, or people. This includes specific information about their First Nation, Inuit, or Métis community and can include copies of historical documents or oral testimony.
The statement must be signed by 2 guarantors who are part of the community, Nation, etc. that the applicant describes their ties to. Guarantors must be over the age of 18 and cannot be members of the applicant’s immediate family (i.e., no siblings, parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, children, grandchildren, or any step variations).
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