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» Go to news mainLighting the path: Courtney Pennell's mission to support and empower Indigenous nursing students
Courtney Pennell is creating the change she once neededbridging worlds with care, culture, and courage.
When Courtney Pennell stepped into her new role with as Mikmaq Indigenous Nurse Education Specialist, it wasnt just a career moveit was a full-circle moment. A registered nurse with nearly a decade of experience, a mother, a researcher, and a proud member of Wasoqopaq First Nation, Pennell carries with her a fierce dedication to supporting Indigenous nursing students across Kjipuktuk and beyond.
I didnt have these types of supports when I was going through the program I know how different it would have been.
Beyond the classroom
Pennells role is far-reaching. She supports Indigenous nursing students from recruitment to graduation, helping them navigate everything from academic resources and funding to cultural support and research opportunities. Its a wholistic model guided by the medicine wheelmental, emotional, physical, and spiritual well-being.
In Western or colonized institutions, we only think about mental and physicalour roles deliver that wraparound support, so students are held in all aspects of who they are.
She helps students apply for bursaries and scholarships, connects them with tutors or emergency financial assistance, facilitates peer gatherings, and ensures that cultural needssuch as ceremony or Indigenous holidaysare respected and accommodated.
I advocate alongside students so they can be their best selves. Our ancestors were deprived of these opportunitieswere reclaiming them.
Bridging systems with Etuaptmumk
A central philosophy guiding Pennells work is Etuaptmumk, or Two-Eyed Seeingbringing together Indigenous ways of knowing with Western knowledge systems (the gift of multiple perspectives). As someone who grew up in urban Halifax and reconnected with her Mikmaw identity through the Native Friendship Centre, Pennell understands how isolating academia can feel for Indigenous students.
When they come from community, its a culture shock Were helping them not only stay in the program, but to thrive in it.
She is also involved in decolonizing nursing curriculumrestructuring courses to reflect Indigenous worldviews, stories, and strengths, not just trauma.
Its important people see themselves reflected in a meaningful and strengths-based way. Otherwise, it perpetuates harm on students who are already vulnerable.
From hospital halls to healing research
Before joining 啦硃轍勳域梗勳鳥禸域, Pennell spent nearly ten years as a nurse and later as the first Indigenous Health Consultant at IWK Health. It was during this time that she found her calling in Indigenous research.
I was asked to do a healing dance at a summit, and thats where I met Dr. Margot Latimershe recruited me on the spot. Dr. Latimer is a Professor in the School of Nursing and is cross-appointed in the Department of Medicine, AV整氈窒. She is the CIHR Nursing Chair in Indigenous Health Research for NS and holds a scientific appointment at IWK Health where she co-leads the Aboriginal Childrens Hurt and Healing Initiative (ACHH).
Working with the Centre for Pediatric Pain Research and the Aboriginal Childrens Hurt and Healing Initiative, Pennell co-developed new tools to help Indigenous children express pain in culturally safe ways. As she explains, In Mikmaw, theres no direct word for paina powerful example of why Western scales dont always work.
If you cant even express pain in your language, how are you supposed to explain it using Western tools?
Her research isnt just academicits deeply personal, a continuation of her lifelong mission to challenge discrimination and address health inequities in Indigenous communities.
Driven by love, grounded in legacy
At the heart of Pennells work is her son, now eight, who has grown up alongside her career and studies. Shes currently completing her Master of Nursing at AV整氈窒, writing a thesis on cultural safety in healthcare delivery for Indigenous patients and families.
As a single mother navigating co-parenting and academia, Pennell says its her connection to culture, community, and her son that fuels her through the most difficult days.
Watching him grow and still flourish through all our transitionsit keeps me grounded. He makes it easy to work extra hard to give us a good life.
Her employers willingness to welcome her son at meetings and community events speaks volumes to the kind of work culture shes helping createone where Indigenous families, values, and futures are honored.
A future worth fighting for
Courtney Pennell is not just helping students earn degreesshes helping them heal, reconnect, and take their place in a healthcare system that has long overlooked them. Shes proof that creating change from the inside out is not only possibleits essential.
We, as a nation, need to do better. As healthcare providers, we have a duty to create safe spaces. And as Indigenous peoples, were reclaiming what was takenand making space for our brilliance to thrive.
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