P.E.I. students seek votes in Young Citizens video competition - Action News
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PEI

P.E.I. students seek votes in Young Citizens video competition

Twelve Island students with outstanding school heritage projects have created videos about their projects and are now are competing with other Canadian students in a national online competition.

Voting continues until July 7

Shelby Dyment (left) and Nicholas Dickieson are among 12 P.E.I. students whose videos about their school heritage projects are part of a national competition. (Angela Walker/CBC)

Twelve Island students with outstandingschool heritage projects have created videos about their projects and are now are competing with other Canadian students in a national Young Citizens video competition.

The videos feature stories of family history and businesses operating on P.E.I.

NicholasDickieson told CBC Radio: MainstreetPEI's Angela Walker about hisproject on an outlaw in his family lineage of whom he is proud, despite the man having served time in jail.

Dickieson'sgreat-great-great grandfather, CharlesDickieson,fought against the tenant laws that saw landowners lose their land and then have to rent it from the new owner, he said.

Family connection

Lauren Johnston did her project on french fry processor CavendishFarms, in part because her father works there.

"I knewCavendishFarmsemployed a lot of people and I wanted to know why they were so important to the Island, to our economy and to Canada, and I learned a lot."

ShelbyDymentfocused her heritage project on a business that, while no longer in business, played a key role in future Island businesses.

"My project is on the Tyne Valley cheese factory, and that is just one of the parts of makingADL the dairy company that we all know and love today."

'I was amazed'

ArdynHardy's project was aboutIsland politician Catherine Callbeck,P.E.I.'s first female premier. Callbeck was also a federal MPand served as a senator.

"I had two interviews with her and I was amazed," said Hardy.

The videosfor the competition had to be four minutes or less, and students wereencouragedto go out and interviewpeople, or shoot in interesting locales.

Johnstonlearned a lot about shooting videos, she added.

"You have to have your words in there, you have to have your timing right. But it was a great experience, it was a lot of fun."

Voting for videos is openuntil July 7on the Young Citizenswebsite. 13 will be decided by popular vote, and 13 winners will be chosen by judges. The 26 winners willtravel to Ottawa for the Canada's History Youth Forum this fall.

With files from CBC Radio: Mainstreet