w:m_workman
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| Margaret Smith was born at Victoria Lake, near Mount Nansen and is a member of the Champagne and Aishihik First Nations. Her great-grandfather was Chief Isaac of Aishihik.((YANSI Elders Circle, //It’s our Time to Tell Our Story.// Whitehorse Aboriginal Women’s Circle, 2025: 228-29.)) She was born into the Wolf clan at Aishihik and was raised knowing how to live on the land.((“Margaret Workman, Dákeyi Our Country – Southern Tutchone Place Names." | Margaret Smith was born at Victoria Lake, near Mount Nansen and is a member of the Champagne and Aishihik First Nations. Her great-grandfather was Chief Isaac of Aishihik.((YANSI Elders Circle, //It’s our Time to Tell Our Story.// Whitehorse Aboriginal Women’s Circle, 2025: 228-29.)) She was born into the Wolf clan at Aishihik and was raised knowing how to live on the land.((“Margaret Workman, Dákeyi Our Country – Southern Tutchone Place Names." | ||
| - | Margaret married a non-native and lost her Status. She joined YANSI and became president of the Haines Junction Local in 1973 and 1977 and vice-president in the mid-1970s. She was a key organizer for projects and attended conferences and meetings in Whitehorse.((YANSI Elders Circle, //It’s our Time to Tell Our Story.// Whitehorse Aboriginal Women’s Circle, 2025: 228-29.)) | + | Margaret married a non-native and lost her Status. She joined |
| Margaret Workman has a Native Language Instructor certificate and a diploma from Yukon College. In 2001, she received an Associate of Applied Science Degree from the University of Alaska Fairbanks. She gained extensive experience teaching Southern Tutchone at all levels of the school system including Yukon College and the University of Alaska. Margaret developed the first grades 11 and 12 Athapaskan language program at F.H. Collins Secondary School in Whitehorse. She was the original impetus for creating the Dákeyi CD ROM project (published 1996). In 1998, she received an Innovations in Teaching Award from the Yukon Department of Education. In 2000, she published //Kwädây Kwändür: Traditional Southern Tutchone Stories,// compiled and translated from interviews with seven elders.((“Margaret Workman, Dákeyi Our Country – Southern Tutchone Place Names." | Margaret Workman has a Native Language Instructor certificate and a diploma from Yukon College. In 2001, she received an Associate of Applied Science Degree from the University of Alaska Fairbanks. She gained extensive experience teaching Southern Tutchone at all levels of the school system including Yukon College and the University of Alaska. Margaret developed the first grades 11 and 12 Athapaskan language program at F.H. Collins Secondary School in Whitehorse. She was the original impetus for creating the Dákeyi CD ROM project (published 1996). In 1998, she received an Innovations in Teaching Award from the Yukon Department of Education. In 2000, she published //Kwädây Kwändür: Traditional Southern Tutchone Stories,// compiled and translated from interviews with seven elders.((“Margaret Workman, Dákeyi Our Country – Southern Tutchone Place Names." | ||
w/m_workman.txt · Last modified: by sallyr
