![group photo outside of the Saagajiwee office in front of a colourful mural of an Indigenous woman, with a beaded totem in the forefront](https://s36138.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Group.Photo_.by_.Derek_-768x576.jpeg)
Reconciliation at The Creative School: The Saagajiwe totem
A beaded totem that represents Saagajiwe’s mission and role within the TMU community will soon find its permanent home in The Creative School.
![Traditional Jingle Dress Dancer, dancing in the circle in a powwow](https://s36138.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/ABFAD129-F62E-4E05-B4FC-F14B25406C5E-768x683.jpg)
![Reconnecting to land, language and culture: Indigenous filmmakers at work, part 2](https://s36138.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Untitled-design-2-768x576.png)
Reconnecting to land, language and culture: Indigenous filmmakers at work, part 2
This is the second in a two-part series highlighting works done by the next generation of Indigenous filmmakers, who are blazing their own path in the industry and bringing Indigenous ways of knowing, being and storytelling to the forefront.
![Reconnecting to land, language and culture: Indigenous filmmakers at work](https://s36138.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Carrie.Backup-1-768x576.png)
Reconnecting to land, language and culture: Indigenous filmmakers at work
This is the first in a two-part series highlighting works done by the next generation of Indigenous filmmakers, who are blazing their own path in the industry and bringing Indigenous ways of knowing, being and storytelling to the forefront.
![(Panelists from left to right) Duncan McCue, Rhiannon Johnson and Karyn Pugliese.](https://s36138.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Decolonizingbooklaunch-768x576.png)
Book launch for Duncan McCue’s Decolonizing Journalism
“What does it mean to decolonize journalism?” This is how Duncan McCue (Anishinaabe from the Chippewas of Georgina Island First Nation), a TMU Roger’s visiting journalist and a CBC broadcaster…
![People holding up flags and signs, participating in the Idle No More Movement](https://s36138.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Idle-no-More-768x576.jpg)
The Power Was With Us: Idle No More
APTN’s new two-part documentary series The Power Was With Us: Idle No More had its second screening at an event hosted by the School of Journalism at Toronto Metropolitan University.…
![A photo of the guest panelists.](https://s36138.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/Panel-768x576.jpg)
Journalist’s Trauma
In never-ending news cycles, where journalists are frequently dealing with traumatic topics, such as the discoveries of unmarked graves of Indigenous children or stories on abuse or race-based issues, newsrooms…
![Duncan McCue while working on the Kuper Island podcast in Penelakut, British Columbia](https://s36138.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/https___www.cbc_.ca_mediacentre_content_images_Duncan_-_Penelakut_-_cc_Evan_Aagaard-1-768x432.jpg)
The making of Kuper Island: Q&A with Duncan McCue
The Kuper Island podcast hosted by award-winning journalist and CBC radio host Duncan McCue, tells the story of three Survivors who attended one of Canada’s most notorious residential schools, Kuper…
![A photo of the Mohawk Institute Residential School in Brantford Ontario](https://s36138.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/iNwShmw0RWCQ15SxCduVLA-768x549.jpg)
Journalism students on a path to improving the media coverage of Indigenous communities
Toronto Metropolitan University utilizes educational resources provided by the Woodland Cultural Centre to ensure all journalism students gain a better understanding of the impact of the residential school system. All…
![When and how should non-Indigenous reporters cover Indigenous stories?](https://s36138.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/McCueFiddlerMorin-FeaturedImage-768x432.png)
When and how should non-Indigenous reporters cover Indigenous stories?
How journalism needs to change to accurately portray Indigenous stories in Canadian media