Parents worry students being left behind in Saskatchewan
Teachers want more funding to support growing classroom sizes and resources to hire more specialized staff to help with an ever larger number of students with intensive needs.
Teachers want more funding to support growing classroom sizes and resources to hire more specialized staff to help with an ever larger number of students with intensive needs.
We're diving into the topic of genetically modified (GM) food, made up of crops or organisms whose genetic material has been altered in a way that does not occur naturally through traditional breeding methods.Â
A friend of mine recently asked me where in the world I would like to travel, and instead of listing some faraway country like Greece or Italy, my response was that I’d like to get to some of the places I haven’t been to in Manitoba and Saskatchewan yet, like the Narcisse Snake Dens.
Flatlander readers weigh in on what they love and hate about the Prairies.
People in Regina could soon see 200 hundred satellites with their eyes all night long in the summer. People can only see 4,000 stars with their eyes meaning one in 15 dots in the sky that you see will be moving.Â
Is it better the prairies fly under the radar? Or would it be better if we had to welcome the masses – tourists and new residents alike – with open arms?
University of Manitoba professor Dr. Philip Ferguson wanted to disrupt an aerospace industry unwilling to try new things.
All four of Manitoba and Saskatchewan’s primary universities have teams working on satellites, rovers, rockets, planetary research and astronomical studies that will help the human race understand our planet and solar system better.Â
This week The Flatlander brings you the story of Dale MacKay—who left Saskatchewan to work with some of the biggest names in the restaurant business, like Gordon Ramsay and Daniel Boulud.Â
Blocking news is retaliation by Meta and Google for Canada's Bill C-18, which would make Big Tech pay for the news shared on their platforms.