Metadata
Title
Indigenous Graduate Students
Category
international
UUID
6b11f5add5fc41c49be82e3bf649a3d0
Source URL
https://grad.ucalgary.ca/current-students/indigenous-graduate-students
Parent URL
https://grad.ucalgary.ca/
Crawl Time
2026-03-19T07:46:59+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Indigenous Graduate Students

Source: https://grad.ucalgary.ca/current-students/indigenous-graduate-students Parent: https://grad.ucalgary.ca/

The university respects the diversity of our learners, their communities, aspirations, cultures and traditions.

The University of Calgary, located in the heart of Southern Alberta, both acknowledges and pays tribute to the traditional territories of the peoples of Treaty 7, which include the Blackfoot Confederacy (comprised of the Siksika, the Piikani, and the Kainai First Nations), the Tsuut’ina First Nation, and the Stoney Nakoda (including Chiniki, Bearspaw, and Goodstoney First Nations). The city of Calgary is also home to the Métis Nation within Alberta (including Nose Hill Métis District 5 and Elbow Métis District 6).

ii’taa’poh’to’p, the University of Calgary’s Indigenous Strategy, provides guidance on our path to reconciliation. The Faculty of Graduate Studies at the University of Calgary recognizes that there are various ways that Indigenous graduate students engage with Indigenous knowledge and traditions. We support Indigenous graduate students who wish to incorporate their traditional ways of knowing, teaching, learning and research. Some of the ways we do this include:

Supporting Documents

Indigenous citizenship and/or Membership Supporting Documents

If you’d like to be considered for funding specific to Indigenous students, you must self-identify as Indigenous on your scholarship application and provide documentation to verify your Indigenous citizenship and/or membership.

Submitted documentation must be current, valid or both to be considered. We encourage you to submit early to ensure that the process is not delayed.\ You only need to provide one of the documentation types set out in our published guidelines.

If your documentation is not specified in the list to the right, it will be forwarded for review by the University of Calgary Committee on Indigenous Citizenship and Membership. Contact the Graduate Award Office for support and advice regarding documentation.

First Nations/Status

First Nations/Non-Status

Documentation will be reviewed by the University of Calgary Committee on Indigenous Citizenship and Membership

Métis

Inuit

Thesis and candidacy exams

We support all Indigenous students who wish to honour their traditions in ways that are meaningful to them. Learn about incorporating Indigenous traditions in your candidacy and/or thesis exams.

Theses

Indigenous graduate students are supported as they consider alternate thesis formats.

Learn more about non-traditional thesis

Working with Indigenous Elders and Knowledge Keepers

Students are encouraged to work with Indigenous Elders and Knowledge Keepers as they write their theses. Elders and Knowledge Keepers may serve as Supervisors, Co-Supervisors, Supervisory Committee Members, Examiners, or Advisory Members.

Indigenous Cultural Protocol Plan

Indigenous graduate students and those working with Indigenous Elders or Knowledge Keepers will be supported if they wish to incorporate Indigenous traditions into their oral exams. This form, to be completed by students and supervisors, lays out a plan for students to incorporate their traditions.

Read the plan

Indigenous Ceremony Scholarship Request Form

This form should be used by students requesting a scholarship from FGS to support the inclusion of ceremony and/or cultural protocols in their thesis defence.

Supervisors should work in consultation with students to arrange all cultural protocols (i.e. arranging the ceremony, inviting traditional knowledge keepers, presentation of offerings). More information and support for that process can be found on the Office of Indigenous Engagement website.

Indigenous Ceremony Scholarship Request Form

Tobacco Offering Request Form

The form below should be used to request tobacco for offerings in support of thesis defence ceremonies or other knowledge sharing opportunities involving graduate students. Please note that information regarding cultural protocols (i.e. arranging the ceremony, inviting traditional knowledge keepers, presentation of offerings) and support for that process can be found on the Office of Indigenous Engagement website.

Tobacco Offering Request Form

Information for examiners and advisory members

Candidacy and thesis oral exams

Why examiners and advisory members?

Examiners play an important role in ensuring that University of Calgary graduate students’ work is of high quality and makes a meaningful contribution to knowledge.

Why me?

If you are serving as an examiner or advisory member, you have been chosen because you are an expert who is able to contribute valuable knowledge and expertise to the examination process. Thank you for agreeing to participate!

What should I do at the exam?

Your job at the exam is to ask questions about the student’s work and its broader significance. These can range from very specific questions about terminology or theory to very broad questions about the implications of the student’s work. If there is something you don’t understand, please feel free to ask a question about it. If you’d like to determine how well a student understands something, please ask a question about that.

How does the exam work?

Many exams begin with a presentation by the student. Then the examiners take turns asking questions. There are at least two rounds of questions. Each examiner usually asks a series of questions during each round. The series of questions from each examiner can take as long as 10 minutes per round. The neutral chair should let you know how long you have to ask questions and will inform you when your time is up. The entire exam should last about two hours.

What happens when the exam is over?

What if I have more questions?

Please don’t feel stressed out about asking the “right” questions at the exam. If you are concerned about the kinds of questions to ask, please contact the Associate Dean, Policy and Program Development, Faculty of Graduate Studies.

Decolonizing dissertations

As a Western institution, the university imposes a set of expectations on its graduate students. The Faculty of Graduate Studies supports Indigenous graduate students in decolonization and indigenization efforts. Recent roundtables addressed a number of relevant issues.

What does decolonization mean?

What does it mean to decolonize graduate work?

Resources and Supports for Indigenous Graduate Students


Writing Symbols Lodge

A culturally appropriate environment that encourages and supports the success of Indigenous students in their pursuit of knowledge and higher education.

Writing Symbols Lodge provides academic, personal, and cultural support services and programs to prospective and current First Nations, Métis, and Inuit students, and offers a welcoming and supportive learning environment for the whole campus community.

Writing Symbols Lodge provides a Cultural Room where students can smudge during regular business hours (Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.). Some faculties have cultural spaces that allow for smudging. Smudging outdoors can be done without restriction.

Learn more

SAGE (Supporting Aboriginal Graduate Enhancement) UCalgary

SAGE UCalgary supports and nurtures the recruitment, retention and completion of Indigenous graduate students at the University of Calgary. This student-run program works to ensure that graduate students can connect with peers, mentors and the broader campus community as they develop their personal, academic and professional skills.

Contact SAGE UCalgary

ii'taa'poh'to'p

Learn more about the university's Indigenous Strategy.

Learn more

Indigenous Engagement

Contact the university's Office of Indigenous Engagement.

Learn more

Would you like to know more? Contact the Faculty of Graduate Studies