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CBC, Concordia University and Kahnawake Survival School team up to inspire next generation of journalists

CBC Quebec is proud to support a partnership between Concordia University's journalism department andKahnawake Survival School(KSS). The initiative aims to inspire Indigenous students to consider a career in media.

Students' stories highlighted on CBC's website and airwaves

Four guests sit around a table in a radio studio.
Concordia's Kristy Snell, left, and Anthony Issa, right, along with Kahnawake Survival School studentsWyatt Harper, centre left, and Rorihwatoken Cross dropped by our CBC studios to discuss what the mentorship program meant to them. (Robin Della Corte/Concordia)

CBC Quebec is proud to support a partnership between Concordia University's journalism department andKahnawake Survival School(KSS). The initiative aims to inspire Indigenous students to consider a career in media.

The collaboration comes out of the department'sInstitute for Inclusive, Investigative and Innovative Journalism, which is headed by Concordia'sjournalist-in-residence,Kristy Snell, who has been delivering CBC Radio's morning newscasts in Montreal for the past 14 years.

Journalism students at the universitymentored students in a Secondary 5film and media class as they developed story ideas, interviewed subjects and wrote articles about people in their community.

CBCgavethe finished stories a home on its website and airwaves. Let's Go, CBC Montreal's afternoon radio show,featured seven piecesby the students and even invited some participants to come into studio for an interview. Wyatt Harper and Rorihwatoken Cross, along with their mentor Anthony Issa, chatted with Let's Go host Sabrina Marandola about what the experience meant to them.

Here are some other storiesfrom KSS students Zye Rashontiiostha Mayo and Wahsontanoron Jamie Diabo.