BCBusiness

November/December 2025 – The Entrepreneur of the Year Awards

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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I N D E P E N D E N T S C H O O L S S P E C I A L F E A T U R E Southpointe works to continuously train its teachers on leveraging new educational technologies for collaboration, assessment and digital storytelling. "Digital learning is reshaping how students think, create and connect," says MacIntyre. "At Southpointe, it empowers students to take ownership of their learning, explore interdisciplinary concepts and collaborate across cultures and time zones." Digital learning at Southpointe could include AI-assisted research, digital portfolios and virtual labs—all helping students develop the agility, ethics and technological fluency to be future-ready. Southpointe is also taking steps to ensure its students are learning how to be responsible digital citizens, critically assessing information and communicating ethically in online environments. "We also emphasize the ethics of AI, teaching students to question bias, understand data privacy and consider the societal impacts of automation," MacIntyre says. "Our graduates will not only thrive in a world shaped by AI, they will shape that world thoughtfully." MacIntyre notes that education is no longer just about knowledge transfer. "It's about humans flourishing in a complex, digital world, and being able to adapt and critically think to make decisions," he says. "It's about thriving as a human being and making a positive difference in the world." ASPENGROVE SCHOOL Aspengrove School, too, is working to teach students how to navigate an increasingly complex world. The school, located north of Nanaimo, introduces technology early into everyday learning. For example, educators at Aspengrove introduce robotics in grade 3 through the VEX GO and VEX IQ platforms, and students can progress through to grade 12. "Robotics, coding and computer-assisted design (CAD) are built into our design curriculum, giving students hands-on experience with the same tools used in engineering, architecture and product development," says Dustin Orser, STEM educator. "We see digital learning not as an add-on, but as a core part of how students think, create and solve problems." The Aspengrove Robotics Club, for example, challenges students in grades 9 to 12 to team up and design, build and program robots to take on engineering challenges. "Through robotics, coding and CAD, they develop critical thinking, problem-solving and teamwork skills, learning to test ideas and adapt when things don't go as planned," says David Riendl, science educator. With careers evolving, Riendl explains, it's important to teach these technologically transferable skills to set students up for success. Riendl adds that Aspengrove students are encouraged to be active creators with technology, and to use it to enhance rather than replace learning. "With AI now part of the learning process, students are guided to use it responsibly, understanding its strengths, its limits and how to apply it ethically in their work," he says. "At the same time, Aspengrove believes in balance. Foundational skills remain central." Aspengrove School

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