Kids discover health-care careers at UM summer camp

Two instructors guide students in a dentistry lab as they examine dental models.
Estimated Read Time:
3 minutes
UM volunteers guide campers through a hands-on dentistry workshop.
UM volunteers guide campers through a hands-on dentistry workshop.
Estimated Read Time:
3 minutes

The University of Manitoba’s Rady Faculty of Health Sciences welcomed students back to its Biomedical Youth Program (BYP) Summer Camp — a week-long immersive experience where youth explore careers in the health sciences through hands-on learning. After a pause due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the camp returned this year with new programming.  

From July 21 to 25, approximately 100 students from Grades six to 12 participated in the camp at no cost. Guided by UM student volunteers, campers engaged in interactive sessions that brought science to life. 

Dr. Gilchrist and campers hold a test tube-like apparatus during a lab activity.
Gilchrist with campers in one of the hands-on activities.
This camp is designed to spark curiosity and show students how science shapes the world around us. By engaging in hands-on activities, students see how science moves beyond textbooks and into real-world impact.

Dr. James Gilchrist, director of BYP and professor of oral biology in the Dr. Gerald Niznick College of Dentistry

Activities ranged from foundational topics in basic and biomedical sciences to hands-on applications in medicine, nursing, dentistry, pharmacy and medical rehabilitation. Campers gained insight into how the health sciences contribute to improving and saving lives. 

Sessions included heart dissection, fingerprint analysis, DNA extraction and more. New this year was the exploration of traditional Indigenous medicines and their relevance and relationship to modern medical practices. 

Mohamed Gashoot, a 15-year-old camp attendee, said he hopes to become a family physician one day. His favourite part of the camp was interacting with the mentors and instructors. 

I get to ask a lot of questions. It’s a positive environment. They’re extremely kind — they’ll help you understand better. And you’ll make a lot of friends here.

Mohamed Gashoot

Group of campers in lab coats during a medical workshop; one camper receives a wrist ultrasound while another holds the ultrasound probe.
Youth campers take part in a hands-on workshop. Mohamed Grashoot, pictured in the center, receives a wrist ultrasound.

From summer camp to the College of Pharmacy 

 

For more than a decade, the BYP summer camp has inspired many participants to pursue careers in the health sciences. 

Among them is Sean Ticsay, who first found out about the summer camp while searching online for fun things to do in summer. He looked up “summer science camp” and clicked on a link from the UM website, which led him to a promotional page about the BYP camp.

“I asked my mom if I can join, signed up for the program, my dad dropped me off at Brodie and the rest is history,” Ticsay said. 

Two individuals in lab coats smiling at the camera.
Dr. James Gilchrist and Sean Ticsay at the 2019 BYP Summer Camp.
As a person of colour and member of an underrepresented group, the BYP summer camp showed me that I had options and there were possibilities.

Sean Ticsay

He attended the summer camp in 2019, which inspired him to pursue a career in health care. After completing his prerequisites over two years at UM’s Fort Garry campus, he remained focused on his goal of joining the Rady Faculty on the Bannatyne campus. This September, Ticsay will enter his third year in the undergraduate Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) program at the College of Pharmacy. 

“I grew up in Winnipeg’s inner city, attending school at Andrew Mynarski and Sisler High. As a person of colour and member of an underrepresented group, the BYP summer camp showed me that I had options and there were possibilities. Hearing from speakers and instructors at the camp and seeing that there were Filipinos like me, there were other people of colour — what I saw was representation, and that gave me inspiration.” 

Youth inspiring youth 

 

Gilchrist emphasized the importance of youth inspiring youth in the community — a core element of BYP’s success. 

For many undergraduate and graduate students at the Rady Faculty, the summer camp is an opportunity to hone their leadership and teaching skills while giving back to the community.

Along with student volunteers, Gilchrist also runs the Saturday Science Club at Niji Mahkwa Elementary School’s Inner City Science Centre, in partnership with the Winnipeg School Division. The Saturday science enrichment program invites Indigenous elementary and junior high school students to participate throughout the fall and winter terms, where they engage in the same hands-on activities featured in the summer camp. 

The student volunteers are the lifeblood of the BYP. They’re the best people to inspire teenage kids because they are close in age — being just three to six years older than them.

Dr. James Gilchrist

A group of campers wearing lab coats sit in the dentistry lab listening to one of the dentistry workshop instructors.
Binita Freider, an undergraduate student from the Dr. Gerald Niznick College of Dentistry, speaks to campers during a dentistry workshop.
Dr. Gilchrist and Vern Dano lead the Ancestral Knowledge session, seated at opposite ends of a long table as campers listen to their conversation about traditional Indigenous medicines.
Campers seated in the dentistry lab, engaged in a hands-on activity.
A wide lab shot taken from the back of the room shows campers with their backs to the camera, listening to a clinical lecture. Five ceiling-mounted TVs display the same visual.
A young camper holds a stethoscope to a manikin, listening to a simulated heartbeat.
Three campers sit on a lab table, dissecting a heart specimen, while a UM volunteer observes and offers guidance.
Two campers at a lab table dissecting a heart specimen.
A PhD student leads a heart dissection, holding a heart specimen while looking toward the campers.
Danny Kustra, clinical education coordinator at UM Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, holds an ultrasound probe to a manikin’s abdomen during a simulation. A group of campers leans in to watch the laptop monitor displaying the ultrasound image.
By

Danica Hidalgo Cherewyk