Childcare students take part in empathy-building “poverty simulation” in Lethbridge
LETHBRIDGE, AB – “I think one of the things for the younger students that come into the Child and Youth Care program is, sometimes, they don’t have a lot of experience with the different agencies that are out there to support families and children, so this is an opportunity for them to see what different organizations are out there for people and what they actually do for them.”
That was a comment made by Brenda Bryson, an Instructor in Lethbridge College’s Human Services Department.
She, along with the United Way Lethbridge & South Western Alberta, had around 50 students in the Child and Youth Care, Educational Assistant, and even General Studies programs get a real-world understanding of what many of the families they will likely have to work with go through on a regular basis.
Bryson believes it is a lot easier to get into poverty than many realize and far more difficult to get out of it.


