Nisga'a language degree to be offered at University of Northern B.C. - Action News
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British Columbia

Nisga'a language degree to be offered at University of Northern B.C.

A new bachelor of arts degree in Nisga'a language fluency will be offered at the University of Northern B.C. starting next September. The four-year undergraduate degree is the first of its kind in northern B.C., the university says.

Bachelor of arts in language fluency starts next year in partnership with Wilp Wilxo'oskwhl Nisga'a Institute

A wooden building.
The Wilp Wilxooskwhl Nisgaa Institute campus in B.C.'s Nass Valley. (UNBC)

A new bachelor of arts degree in Nisga'a language fluency will be offered at the University of Northern British Columbia starting next September.

A statement from the university says the four-year undergraduate degree is the first of its kind in northern B.C. and will give students an immersive education with about 70 per cent of the courses having a Nisga'a component.

The Nisga'a people, who live in the Nass Valley in the northwestern part of the province, were the first to sign a modern treaty in B.C. in a landmark agreement that came into effect in May 2000.

The university is teaming up with the Wilp Wilxo'oskwhl Nisga'a Institute, a post-secondary facility in the Nass Valley run through the Nisga'a Lisimsgovernment, where certificate and diploma programs in the Nisga'a language are already offered.

Institute CEO Deanna Nyce says it's exciting to witness students becoming fluent and using their language skills in public.

The statement says the four-year undergraduate degree will help ensure the long-term vitality of the Nisga'a language.

B.C. Minister of Post-Secondary Education Selina Robinson says investing in such programs is critical for strengthening Indigenous language revitalization, while moving toward meaningful reconciliation.

"Together, we are creating a province where Indigenous students, and through them their communities, can reconnect with their language as a way to reclaim their history and culture and reach their full potential."