Grad student and rookie MP gives new meaning to 'learning on the job' - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:46 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Grad student and rookie MP gives new meaning to 'learning on the job'

Arielle Kayabaga will have a unique edge on her classmates (and maybe even some of her professors) when she returns to classes at Carleton University this fall as a member of Parliament.

Arielle Kayabaga plans to complete grad course in political management at Carleton University

Arielle Kayabaga
Arielle Kayabaga, a first-term city councillor in London, Ont., was elected MP for London West on Monday. She's also enrolled in the Clayton H. Riddell Graduate Program in Political Management at Carleton University. (ariellekayabaga.liberal.ca)

When ArielleKayabaga returns to classes at Carleton University this fall, she might have a thing or two to teach her professors.

Kayabaga, a first-term city councillor in London, Ont., tookthe riding of London West for the Liberals in Monday's federal election.

The 30-year-old MP-elect also happens to be enrolled in Carleton's Clayton H. Riddell Graduate Program in Political Management, which bills itself as "an intensive master's degree designed to provide a professional foundation for students who play or will play leadership roles in political offices," among other politically focused career paths.

I'm always willing to turn it over to the expert in the room, and I'm sure this will happen with Arielle.- Stephen Azzi, Riddell Program director

Kayabaga, who received her BAin political science from Carleton and already has some backroom experienceon Parliament Hill,told CBC she plans to completethe one-year graduate program on a part-time basisand has until 2024 to do so.

"My intentions are to finish it," she said earlier this week. "I'm a single mom, so when I was in university I was raising a small child. It's a very challenging situation to be in, but I've been able to do it before and I think I can do it again."

Does she really need to? As a sitting MP, Kayabagawill be sitting at the centre of Canadian politics a fact that has not escaped the attention ofsome of her professors in a program many regard as a training ground for professional politicians.

"I think it's exciting," Kayabaga said of her dual role as both student and parliamentarian. "I think it's going to be a really great opportunity to do both and to be able to serve while [I'm] also still learning."

Kayabaga's family came to Canada after fleeing civil war in Burundi, arriving in London when she was 11. Her website says that"Arielle'sstory is one of breaking barriers, overcoming adversity, and defying expectations. She is a shining example of a new type of political and community leader: progressive, unapologeticand committed to representing marginalized voices in her community."

Kayabaga pulls pints with Liberal leader Justin Trudeau at Storm Stayed Brewing Company in London, Ont., during a campaign stop last week. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

Stephen Azzi, director of the Riddell Program, agrees with that assessment.

"She's a very impressive individual. She's a real go-getter, so if anybody can pull it off it'll be her," he said, adding thatKayabaga is the first elected MP to be enrolled in the program.

Azzi said the program tends to appeal to political science grads who"came away a little frustrated" because their undergraduate studies turned out to be more theoretical than they'd anticipated.

"So these are people who want to get their hands dirty actually working in politics," he said.

Azzi said when hesurveysstudents in the program, about half of them saythey're interested in running for political office at some point in the future.

Stephen Azzi is director of the Clayton H. Riddell Graduate Program in Political Management at Carleton University. (Submitted)

Might some professorsfind it a bit daunting to teach a student who's already an MP? Maybe butnot necessarily, saidAzzi.

"We do get students who have a lot of experience, and frequently when I'm teaching a class I find there's somebody in the room who knows more about the subject than I do.I'm always willing to turn it over to the expert in the room, and I'm sure this will happen with Arielle," he said.

"When you teach political management and you're teaching a bunch of political experts, you become humble very quickly."

Lots to learn

Azzi said students in the program learn the ins and outs of campaigning, polling and policy development, so there's something new for everyone even a sitting MP.

Last year, Azzi got a call from a senator on the verge of retirement who was interested in enrolling in the program after a career on Parliament Hill.

"So even if you're living and breathing it every day, you might not know everything," he said.

Launched in 2010, the Riddell Program is named after the late ClayRiddell, billionaire founder of Calgary-based petroleum company Paramount Resources Ltd., whose generous donation to Carleton made the programpossible.

It's normally an intensive12-month program with a 10-week summer practicum for real-world work experience, but students have the option of taking evening courses over two or three years instead. Of the 50 or so students currently enrolled, about one-third are studying part-time, Azzi said.

Classes have been held online during the pandemic, but in-person learning is gradually resuming at Carleton.

Kayabaga said she'd be happy to mentor her classmates in the political management program if asked to do so. (Andrew Lupton/CBC)

There could be another advantage to having a student in the program who's also an MP: Azzi said classes are frequently taught on Parliament Hill, so "we need a friendly member's office to help us book rooms, and this might be a new friendly MP's office for us."

Kayabaga said she's eager to helpand, if called upon, to act as a mentor to her less-experienced classmates.

"I would love to," she said."I would love to offer that opportunity. I think it would be a great exchange between the school and I."

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of.You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)