 The Inu Studies course is a program that teaches students about the Inu culture, our past, how we do things, how we hunt, trap, all of that, how to make moccasins, how to sow, everything like that. The Inu Studies course. Students that, high school students, the purpose, teach kids about their culture of how sometimes we take things for granted too easily and how it might get lost later on and how we should always keep that within ourselves. Learning skills that has always been in our culture, but always seem to be slowly going away the longer time goes on, so it just reinforces our skills. I think we're very successful. There's a lot of interest in it, a lot of activities to do, a lot of things to learn. It taught me skills that I didn't have before or didn't know much about, so I didn't know about sowing or beadwork, but I learned it in this course. From your perspective, what is Indigenous education? I think Indigenous education is learning things from our point of view and then imparting that knowledge into our kids and then keep going like that from generation to generation, hands-on skills, oral skills, stories, stuff like that. What is your vision for Indigenous education over the next 10 years? I think once it gets a bigger foothold, a lot more schools will take notice and they will maybe incorporate it into their own programs, something like that. What was your favorite part of the course? Going out and trapping. We learned how to make traps, make sners, going out there ourselves instead of watching it on screen, on TV, we're actually being there ourselves, so it just gives a more of a presence than staying home. Oh, why do you think it's important? So we don't lose our culture a lot, so if we don't teach our kids what are they going to know about the end of people, they're not going to know anything, so they learn about it now, they can give it on to their kids and their kids and their kids. Are there any things that you haven't learned yet that you hope that they're going to teach in this course? Not really, maybe hiking, with snowshoes, stuff like that, survival skills maybe, simple stuff like that.