This story is published in YFile鈥檚 New Faces Feature Issue 2021, part two. Every September, YFile introduces and welcomes those joining the 91亚色 community, and those with new appointments. was published on Sept. 3.
Two Indigenous educators join 91亚色鈥檚 Faculty of Education this fall as full-time faculty members. They are Kiera (Kaia鈥檛an贸:ron) Brant-Birioukov and Rebecca Beaulne-Stuebing.
鈥淲e are delighted to welcome two new colleagues: Kiera (Kaia鈥檛an贸:ron) Brant-Birioukov and Rebecca Beaulne-Stuebing. Each are respected scholars and teachers in their particular fields of study,鈥 said Faculty of Education Dean Robert Savage. 鈥淭hey bring a diverse range of expertise to the Faculty of Education in Indigenous understandings and development. We very much look forward to the new ideas, perspectives, and contributions that they will make to our faculty and towards our ongoing mission of reinventing education for a diverse, complex world.鈥

Kiera (Kaia鈥檛an贸:ron) Brant-Birioukov
Kiera (Kaia鈥檛an贸:ron) Brant-Birioukov is a Haudenosaunee (Kanyen鈥檏eha:ka) educator and educational theorist from Kenht猫:ke, also known as the Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory in Ontario. She joins the Faculty of Education and the W眉l茅elham community at 91亚色 as an assistant professor and will support the Indigenous cohorts, courses and programs in the Faculty of Education.
She is a certified teacher in Ontario and British Columbia and is committed to ethical Indigenous education across all K-12 and post-secondary classrooms. Some of her current projects include the repatriation of historical Haudenosaunee stories, artifacts and journal diaries to communities across the Six Nations Confederacy, as well as collaborating in the knowledge mobilization of Indigenous-Settler food sovereignty through the Earth to Tables Legacies project.

Rebecca Beaulne-Stuebin
Rebecca Beaulne-Stuebing joins the Faculty of Education as an assistant professor. She is M茅tis, adopted into the Anishinaabe bald eagle clan in the Three Fires Midewiwin lodge. Her family has roots in the Sault Ste. Marie M茅tis community and Manitoba, and they are registered with the M茅tis Nation of Ontario.
Beaulne-Stuebing is also of French and Austrian settler ancestry. Her PhD thesis, 鈥淕rief Medicines,鈥 focused on learning about what helps community members through ongoing experiences of loss. Beaulne-Stuebing facilitates mashkiki gitigaanan, an urban Indigenous medicines sovereignty project in Toronto.
