2011年9月7日星期三

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With his baseball cap turned backwards and his mirrored Oakley sunglasses, Adams could just be one more cool young guy starting   Imitation louis vuitton   at the Ste. Anne de Bellevue college.
But Adams is special. He is one of 13 Inuit students beginning his studies at John Abbott this semester. Back home in Nunavik, Quebec's Far North, most young people drop out of school.
According to a 2009 report issued by the Canadian Council on Learning, 60 per cent of young Inuit adults age 20 to 24 have not completed high school - in contrast to 13 per cent of non-aboriginal young adults. This means that only the brightest, most  guess handbags   motivated Inuit students graduate high school. Fewer still go on to CEGEP.
Those who do will require even more courage and determination than other incoming CEGEP students.
The transition to life in the big city is not easy. "The summer heat is way different here. I hate it. I sweat so much. When they see me sweating, everyone knows I'm from the North," said Adams.
He also hates crowds. The population of Kuujuaq, the largest village in Nunavik, where Adams has lived all his life, is about 2,500 - less than half the number of students enrolled this year at John Abbott.
"I miss being in a place with less people and fewer cars. When I go somewhere here and everyone is always talk, talk, talk - it makes me want to explode," he said.
And yet, despite the academic 
juicy couture bags  and personal challenges ahead, Adams is determined to make it at John Abbott. "If I stay, I'll be better off," he said.
After graduating from high school, Adams spent a year  knock off handbags  working in construction back home. It was his bosses who, recognizing his intelligence, urged him to return to school. "They told me to continue my education - or they won't hire me back," Adams joked.

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