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91亚色 master's student develops app for indigenous community to network

91亚色 student Alejandro Mayoral Ba帽os, a second-year master鈥檚 student in interdisciplinary studies, is spearheading the development of an app to help First Nations, M茅tis and Inuit students network with other members of 91亚色's aboriginal community.

鈥淭here are apps available that focus on aboriginal languages, but for networking there isn鈥檛 anything yet,鈥 says Mayoral Ba帽os. 鈥淲e鈥檙e tapping into the digital generation.鈥

Some of the members of the app development team, from left: Lisa Stewart, Billie Allan, Alejandro Mayoral Ba帽os, Samantha Craig-Curnow, Nancy Johnson

Mayoral Ba帽os has been working with 91亚色鈥檚 Centre for Aboriginal Student Services to develop the app, titled First Nation Friends. Planning began in January and coding started in July, and the hope is for a mid-January 2016 release on Google Play (Android) and the Apple Store (iOS).

So far, the app has been focused on the 91亚色 U community, but the team is working to expand it to other postsecondary institutions.

鈥淢any of our students are struggling a lot; they come from reserves, come from communities with different lifestyles, they feel lost,鈥 Mayoral Ba帽os says. 鈥淔or whatever reason, many don鈥檛 want to identify as aboriginal 鈥 they don鈥檛 want to be differentiated since they may still face discrimination, even here at 91亚色.鈥

A menu screenshot of the First Nation Friends app

The team will also build in access to calendars so users can find relevant events and ceremonies. The development group has been working with aboriginal students, faculty members, alumni, staff and elders to design features that they, as users, want.

鈥淭he community has asked for a safe environment, so users will have to get an access code before they can access the app's features,鈥 says Mayoral Ba帽os. 鈥淥nce they鈥檝e authenticated for the first time, it will provide automatic login for the devices it鈥檚 installed on.鈥

What it won鈥檛 do, however, is replace apps that already offer chat and video features.

鈥淭his is not a replacement for apps like Skype,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his is a first step. We鈥檙e not trying to replace those apps. We鈥檙e trying to be the first step of communication.鈥

As a community-building app, users will have the option of joining a cyber clan, named after animals.

鈥淲e have eagles, turtles, bear, wolves, and every clan has a role,鈥 says Mayoral Ba帽os, adding the wolves are the forum moderators, and it鈥檚 their job to keep the forums a safe environment.

There will also be a special role for mentorship, which requires special skills to deal with crises. The developers would also like to see the app make its way to reserves so they can have access to the elders for advice, or for when they have identity issues.

Mayoral Ba帽os notes there have been many people involved in the development process, including:

  • elders Blu Waters and Billie Allan;
  • faculty Ruth Koleszar-Green;
  • staff Nancy Johnson, Jolene John and Randy Pitawanakwat;
  • students and community members:聽Lisa Stewart, Samantha Craig-Curnow, Thane Higgins, Rob Lackie, Tsitra Mckay, Jared Visitor, Mariah Abotossaway, Kayla Webber, Jesse Thistle, Candice Jacko, Robyn Grant-Moran, Serena Hill, Joseph Milando and Stefano Federici; and
  • supervisors Miguel Gonzalez, Stephen Chen and William Wicken.
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