Working directly with Indigenous communities across Canada to inform our research

Who we are

We are a group of researchers, educators, and Indigenous community members (youth, Elders, educators, parents, health practitioners and policy makers) from Nova Scotia Mi’kmaw Kina’matnewey, Tsuut'ina Education Department (Alberta), Chilliwack School District (British Columbia), Three Nations Education (New Brunswick), Dalhousie University, Alberta Health Services and University of British Columbia Faculty of Education. We are funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) to lead the project entitled, Developing, Evaluating and Sustaining a School-Based Mental Health Literacy Resource for Indigenous Youth.

This project is also supported by Women and Children's Health Research Institute at the University of Alberta and the Max Bell Foundation.

Project partners

UBC Faculty of Education

Chilliwack School District (British Columbia)

Alberta Health Services / MentalHealthLiteracy.Org

Tsuut'ina Board of Education (Alberta)

University of Alberta

Dalhousie University

Mi’kmaw Kina’matnewey (Nova Scotia)

Three Nations Education Group Inc. (New Brunswick)

Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)

Our team

Dr. Yifeng Wei, Principal Investigator

Dr. Yifeng Wei, MA, PhD, has worked as a researcher and school mental health lead with MentalHealthLiteracy.org since 2008. She is currently assistant professor with the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Alberta and adjunct assistant professor at Dalhousie University. Her research interests focus on promoting mental health literacy in schools (both secondary and post-secondary settings) to help students gain better understanding about mental health and mental disorders, reduce stigma against mental illness, obtain and maintain good mental health and enhance help-seeking behaviors. She has made a significant contribution to school mental health research, program development, and education across Canada and around the world. Dr. Wei continues to work with school districts and educations institutions to improve health outcomes for students and educators. Dr. Wei has co-authored more than 40 peer-reviewed publications, book chapters and one book on school mental health. She has led/co-led more than 30 school mental health projects, locally, nationally and internationally. She has also presented at regional, national and international scientific meetings and conferences. Dr. Wei was awarded the Canadian Institute of Health Research Doctoral Research Award in 2011 and the Dalhousie University President’s award in 2011 and 2012.

British Columbia

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Dr. Jan Hare, Co-PI

Dr. Jan Hare is an Anishinaabe scholar and educator from the M’Chigeeng First Nation, located in northern Ontario, and current Dean pro tem of the UBC Faculty of Education. She seeks to transform education in ways that are more inclusive of Indigenous ways of knowing. Her research is concerned with improving educational outcomes for Indigenous learners by centering Indigenous knowledge systems within educational reform from early childhood education, K to 12 schooling, through to post-secondary learning, recognizing the holistic and multidisciplinary nature of Indigenous education. In her role as a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Pedagogy, Dr. Hare is examining the complex processes of learning to teach using Indigenous knowledge frameworks. Focusing on instructor knowledge, beliefs and practices, she and her team seek to establish evidence-informed practices for improving how instructors teach and students learn from Indigenous intellectual traditions and practices.

Dr. Hare has centred the importance of mental wellbeing in much of her educational leadership and community outreach, most notably in her recent role as Director of UBC’s Indigenous Teacher Education Program (NITEP). She recognizes that Indigenous identity, balance, positive relationships and connectedness, and Indigenous ways of knowing as core elements that can exist alongside Western/Eurocentric approaches to mental health and wellbeing for Indigenous people.

Dr. Wendy Carr

Dr. Wendy Carr is a Professor of Teaching in Language and Literacy Education in the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia. She has had a long career in education in the school system as teacher and district level consultant as well as in post-secondary as a teacher educator and administrative leader. Her work in recent years in mental health literacy education has included the co-creation of a curriculum for pre-service teachers to develop their understanding and skills related to youth mental health, completion of a number of research studies that have been published nationally, mobilization of BC school district leaders to build staff professional capacity in mental health literacy, and collaborative projects with a number of partners including the Ministry of Education, various mental health agencies and other provincial organizations.

She is honoured to work alongside Indigenous leaders, educators, health professionals, elders and youth in co-developing a curriculum resource that is strengths-based, holistic in its approach and guided by Indigenous knowledges and perspectives. We have much to learn in this project as we work towards the overarching goal of providing meaningful, culturally respectful support for Indigenous youth wellbeing.

Brenda Point

Brenda Point is Anishinaabe and has made her roots in the Sto:lo territory. She is a wife, mother and grandmother. Born in Port Arthur, Ontario Brenda’s family moved to British Columbia where she completed her Grade 1-12 education. Her mother, a residential school survivor of the Birtle school, is from Tootinaowaziibeeng First Nation in Manitoba, her father is Metis from the Red River Valley and she is married into Skowkale First Nation, in Chilliwack BC.

Brenda has been supporting Indigenous students and families in Chilliwack School District since beginning her career in 1994. Over the years her leadership as an Indigenous Educator has included roles as Indigenous Education Enhancement teacher, School Principal and most recently as District Principal for Indigenous Education. Her passion and commitment to improve school experiences for future generations drives her to work collaboratively with the local Sto:lo people as well as all other Indigenous folks in the territory.

The Indigenous Youth Mental Health Literacy project is an important strategy for all young people to gain an understanding about their own wellbeing through Indigenous ways of knowing and being.

Melanie Nelson

Melanie Nelson is Samahquam, which is one of the First Nations communities that make up the In-SHUCK-ch Nation, who are part of the larger St’at’imc people in BC. She is also Squiala from the Stó:lō Nation. Melanie has experience as an Indigenous Education & Inclusive Education teacher, she has taught K-12, and has taught in mainstream, adapted, modified, and alternate settings.

Currently a school psychologist, she is completing her PhD in School and Applied Child Psychology at UBC. Her dissertation is being completed in collaboration with a local Nation exploring how their youth identify and access mental health supports in their communities, in schools, and in the public/Western community. Elder Gerry Oleman (Tsal’alh First Nation, St’at’imc) has been Eldering for Melanie since November 2017, sharing traditional approaches to wellness while she receives Western training. Melanie is the graduate student coordinating the BC portion of the IYMHL project.

As the granddaughter of two Indian Residential School Survivors, this project is important to heal our Ancestors, to enhance educator capacity through a meaningful tool, and to improve supports for current and future generations of Indigenous youth.

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Saylesh Wesley

Saylesh Wesley is an Indigenous educator of Coast Salish and Tsimshian descent. Currently she works as the District Indigenous Education Resource Enhancement Teacher for the Chilliwack School District and also continues to present at a wide variety of events as it relates to her varied Indigenous knowledge and lived experience. Given that Saylesh is steeped in her own Coast Salish Indigenous culture, she always aims to share her story and her compassionate listening ears as a junior elder. Saylesh continues her aspirations towards her own wellness and healing and she has committed to ‘share back’ what she has learned. This important project that supports the wellness of our Indigenous youth is one of her biggest reasons that she invests so much time and good energy towards our future’s generational healing.

Northwest Territories

Joel Dragon Smith

Joel Dragon Smith is from Yellowknife, Northwest Territories and is the Indigenous Youth Representative on the project.  Joel has grown up experiencing the effect of colonization on Indigenous ways of being and is passionate about giving Indigenous youth a voice and the resources to be able to reclaim a holistic relationship with health for themselves. He has been through the mental health system which gives him knowledge and understanding of what currently exists for mental health support and of mental illness itself, from the perspective of Indigenous youth. 

This project is important because I see the trauma and hurt that Indigenous people carry as a result of colonization and systems that broke their original way of life. I strongly feel that Indigenous youth deserve thoughtful tools to heal the intergenerational trauma in a way that speaks to them from their perspective. I want them to have the resources to guide them towards a worldview on health that resonates with them and their ancestors. I want to help them to find harmony within all areas of their life, so their lives may flow with ease, their relationships may flourish and their mind may remain peaceful.

Brenda Dragon

Brenda Dragon is a volunteer from the Northwest Territories. Having navigated the health care system in dealing with mental health recovery for her son, she developed unique understanding becoming an advocate for youth mental health. Brenda has had in-depth experience as a parent in the broader educational system and cultural inclusion and has contributed and volunteered in many organizations and boards in the NWT. Having had career experience in the fields of Health, Education, Indigenous Tourism and currently, she is the President and Founder of her own business, Aurora Heat, Inc.

This project is important to me because I feel my role representing parents/grandparents is an important voice that I can contribute to the project. Just as students and youth need the tools for literacy for healthy mental health, parents/grandparents also need their care and concern to be reflected as a part of the process of defining those tools. 

Alberta

Valerie McDougall

Bio coming soon.

Andrew Baxter

Andrew Baxter, MSW RSW, has worked in school-based and community mental health for over 18 years. During his time with Alberta Health Services, he has provided direct treatment for students from K-12, as well as consultation for their families and teachers. Andrew currently serves as the Team Lead for mentalhealthliteracy.org and the Alberta Mental Health Literacy Project. In these roles, he has worked to promote school mental health literacy among students, educators, parents, and mental health professionals at provincial, national and international levels. Andrew has delivered mental health literacy training to over 10,000 educators and supported school leaders from across Alberta and beyond in implementing the mental health literacy approach in their school districts to better address youth mental health needs. Responding to the many requests from educators, Andrew is currently coordinating the development of resources for mental health literacy suitable for students in elementary grades to complement the suite of resources developed for junior high and high school students. He is honored to be a member of the Indigenous Mental Health Literacy committee, supported through the Canadian Institute of Health Research. Andrew provides professional learning for educators through the University of British Columbia Faculty of Education Mental Health Institute and is an Adjunct Lecturer with the University of Calgary Department of Psychiatry. Andrew is actively making parenting mistakes with his two elementary-aged children.

Lori Roe

Lori Roe, RSW MSW, is the manager of Mental Health & Substance Use Collaborative Initiatives with the Child & Adolescent Addiction and Mental Health and Psychiatry Program with Alberta Health Services Calgary zone and has worked for AHS for almost 25 years. She is managing both clinical and collaborative education and literacy teams with an emphasis on child and adolescent mental health. She is also a member of the Calgary Regional Post-Secondary Mental Health Network, City of Calgary Mental Health Strategy, many municipal and provincial working groups. She is committed to furthering the collaborative and integrated work between health and education to better serve our children, youth and families.

Mental Health literacy is a critical part of learning about our overall health, physical and mental. Having evidenced-based information and correct language is important, especially when seeking support or help when you experience mental health problems. When working with our Indigenous partners, we need to ensure we are honoring their ways of knowing, being and speaking so that we can be the best partners in our work with and for them. This project allows us to go directly to those partners, to expand our learnings about their ways of being and to share our knowledge and information.

Stacey Runningrabbit

Bio coming soon.

Georgina Bird

Bio coming soon.

Nova Scotia

Ann Syliboy

Bio coming soon.

Elizabeth Cremo

Bio coming soon.

New Brunswick

Katalin Koller

Bio coming soon.