How a Halifax program became a lifeline for newcomer families during the pandemic - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 10, 2024, 09:23 PM | Calgary | 0.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

How a Halifax program became a lifeline for newcomer families during the pandemic

A newcomer support program from the YMCA is helping families overcome difficulties presented by the COVID-19 pandemic and settle into their new lives in Halifax.

YMCA settlement staff work on site in 35 schools in the Halifax area to provide support

YMCA settlement worker Tilak Arora alongside Malik Alharoun, 11, (centre) and Ali Alharoun, 10. (Mark Crosby/CBC)

A newcomer support program is helping families overcome difficulties presented by the COVID-19 pandemic and settle into their new lives in Halifax.

The YMCA school settlement program works with students and their families throughout the region. And while it has been running for about 25 years, staff sayits current work through spells of online school learning has beenindispensable in a challenging time.

"We are a lifeline for the newcomer families, we build trust," said program co-ordinatorAchala Hewaarachchi. "It's so important you feel you belong and our school settlement staff make that happen."

Eighteen staff from the YMCA program work on site in HRM schools where they provide academic help along with a range of other supports.

Schools are currently observing COVID-19 safety protocols, so workers are taking extra steps to stay connected with families through calls outside school hours.

Achala Hewaarachchi says her staff offer important support and community connections to children and families who are newcomers to Halifax. (Mark Crosby/CBC)

They're also trying to keep children engaged by offering new ways to help them learn English.

"We have an evening online reading program for the children in the schools so it's wonderful how innovative we can be," Hewaarachchi explained.

Tilak Arora is a school settlement staff member at Bedford South school.

A big focus for him lately has involved working through another pandemic-related issue of helping families get used to working with new technology to be able to support them virtually as well as for the adjustment to online schooling.

"It's been difficult, most of the children coming to our schools come from countries where technology may be a big issue so we go out of our way to help them understand how to use it," Arora said. He's helped set up students with chromebooks provided by the school for online learning.

Nearly half of Bedford South's approximately 600 children are immigrants to Canada, Arora said.

Tilak Arora has been helping children and their families as a settlement worker at Bedford South school for 14 years. (Mark Crosby/CBC)

He supports the staff as well as the children there, in a partnership that principal Helen Healy acknowledges is shaping the school's approach.

"How we can recognize where they have come from and to show our respect and importance of where they have come from and how we can include that in our teachings," Healy said.

Mohammad and Nawal Alharoun, who are originally from Syria and moved to Canada from Jordan six years ago, have two children at Bedford South.

They've been in direct contact with Tilak Arora since registering at the school.

Their boys Malik and Ali have both made lots of friends and are now confident speaking English.

"It is very good because when we come here we don't speak English and for the children it was a different country, different system, the school everything is different," Mohammad Alharoun said.

Nawal and Mohammad Alharoun say they're impressed with the support their children get from the partnership between the YMCA and Bedford South school. (Mark Crosby/CBC)

Virtual programming has been extended to people who recently arrived in Nova Scotia from Afghanistan.

About 25 Afghan children got a virtual tour of a school while still in quarantine.

"We've been doing online programming for them, for the young children who are school age, and they're excited because we're helping them learn English and making activities that are fun," Hewaarachchi said.

Nearly three thousand people got support from the school settlement program in 2021.

With more newcomers already arriving in Halifax this month, from Afghanistan and Syria in addition to Somalia and Ethiopia, Hewaarachchi is preparing to welcome more families.

"Our days are really long and busy."