Allyship: from Confusion to Becoming

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Allyship is greatly valued and a huge step towards challenging oppression. Allyship with IndigenousPeoples’requires an unwavering commitment to learning, unlearning and challenging change. It meansbuilding and fostering respectful relationships, that includes a process of building relationships based ontrust, consistency, and accountability. This micro-credential will examine common interpretations of the word “ally” and the work of “allyship”including the role of allyship from an Indigenous lens, why allies are needed, how an ally can overstep, and what qualifies someone as an ally.

Please see below for delivery information and schedule. 

Questions?

Please contact our Recruitment Team at recruitment@fnti.net or 1.800.267.0637, ext. 141

Terms & Conditions

Refund Policy

This micro-credential includes five 3-hour sessions for a total delivery time of 15 hours. 

Next Delivery TBD.

Virtual, synchronous
  1. Define ally and allyship.
  2. Identify the critical strengths and limitations of allyship.
  3. Develop a clear intent for personal allyship work.
Sorry, this course is not open for enrollment
Price: $590.00