Learners will also explore individual values and principles and their definitions. Learners will work to explore their own values, how they define each value, and their associated behaviour, and establish plans to align personal values to establish personal integrity in their leadership practice.
Learners will utilize this knowledge to reflect upon real world community challenges, and apply their learning in the continued development of their year two internship. In recent years, there has been a dramatic increase in the need for business professionals to be able to use mathematics in research, statistics, problem solving and decision-making.
This course is designed to expose students to the areas of mathematics that they are likely to require in their future jobs or areas of study. Topics include linear equations, sets and counting, probability, matrices, linear programming and solving financial problems.
Students will learn how to write business letters, memos, reports, and electronic messages. Each unit begins with a set of learning objectives.
The assigned readings, together with the reinforcement exercises, are the principal learning activities. This course focuses on the writing process. Students will learn how to develop, organize, write, revise, document, and edit essays. FNPA - Credits: 3. In addition, the course will provide an opportunity for participants to learn how the enabling tools may be used to strengthen the financial administration and economic development capacities of First Nation communities.
Students who take this course will be able to understand and discuss the principles of economics and taxation in Canada and relate it to a First Nations context.
Indigenous Leadership. Join an intergenerational legacy of strong community leaders. Please subscribe to our Leadership and Indigenous Leadership e-newsletters to keep informed on upcoming programs, dates, and news within our community.
Featured Programs View All. February 08 - February 11, February 15 - February 18, March 08 - March 11, March 22 - March 25, Applied Research We can supply the resources and expertise to work with Indigenous communities and organizations on specific challenges through an applied research project.
Our Team. Consequently, hunting and trapping continued under a permit system and a Hunters and Trappers Association was formed to set permit limits on an annual basis. It was the first time that Parks Canada involved Indigenous peoples in a decision regarding the management of a park. It was also the beginning of a legacy of cooperative management that is now prevalent throughout the northern Parks Canada system. As land claims negotiations took place with northern Indigenous peoples, it became evident that opportunities existed for a shared vision of resource protection that allowed hunting, trapping and other cultural activities to continue as part of a modern day treaty.
Following the Inuvialuit Final Agreement and the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement, Parks Canada began negotiations to establish parks that included a provision for cooperative management boards. This meant that sections of land would be set aside as park reserves and managed as national parks until land claims pertaining to that land were resolved.
This has been an effective tool for forging strong relationships with Indigenous peoples and protecting lands from development by third parties during land claim negotiations. Advisory bodies range from informal structures that provide ad hoc advice, to ones that are set out in formal agreements such as cooperative management boards established through park establishment agreements. Progress Report on Implementation of the Recommendations of the Panel on the Ecological Integrity of Canada's National Parks Building Partnerships for Ecological Integrity The Panel identifies in very explicit terms and makes positive recommendations on a topic that we all know well — what we do in our backyard has an impact on our neighbours' backyards!
Our national parks share with the provinces and territories, Aboriginal peoples, private land owners and various other interests common boundaries over which nature makes no distinction. One day a grizzly bear is in a national park, and the next day it is outside; water pollution from one source affects other water users far removed; acid rain from hundreds of kilometres away becomes a problem when it affects national park resources — the list goes on. The Panel envisioned renewed and extended cooperation among neighbours who share these common resources and concerns, and Parks Canada is making this a priority.
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