People of Georgian: āBubblesā makes full-circle college journey
March 4, 2022
Whatās your story?
The Georgian community is full of unique, inspiring perspectives āand weāre sharing them as part of an ongoing series.
People of Georgian: Meet Lisa Lavigne
To fulfil my desire to help children, I volunteer with .
For the last 15 years, Iāve worked with children ages five to seven in the .
The kids donāt know me by my real name; they all call me Bubbles. Thatās my leader name.

I got that name from the children, who always get to pick a name for new leaders out of a Scouts Canada book called Friends of the Forest. Ā
Itās about a family of beavers who meet the Jones family, and they give the humans names based on their personalities. One of the characters in the book is named Bubbles because she is open-minded, proud, confident, and inspirational, along with her very upbeat, bubbly personality.
When I became a new leader, my two sons were in the program, and my youngest son told all of the kids in the group that Bubbles had to be my name.
So, Iāve been Bubbles for 15 years.
āIt fills me up with joy inside and makes my day even brighter.ā
Lisa Lavigne
The children I work with come from all different backgrounds and abilities. Being in such a small community, many of them eventually become Georgian students.
Once, this young lad came in my office, saw me, and said, āOh my goodness! Bubbles, itās so good to see you!ā I said, āYou can call me Lisa now.ā
But to see these kids today all grown up is so fulfilling.
This one individual I remember vividly: very quiet, very shy, in his own little shell. To see him now grown ā in postsecondary education and confident ā it fills me up with joy inside and makes my day even brighter.
College was 24 years in the making
My own postsecondary journey wasnāt so straightforward.
I started at Georgian back in 1994 with the General Arts and Sciences program. At the time, I did not know yet what I wanted to do or which direction I wanted to go in.
Eventually, I discovered Child and Youth Care and moved to Alberta to take a program out there.
āI took a year off⦠and life happenedā
I took a year off to work and save money ā and life happened. I was going to be expecting my first child, so I moved back to Ontario to focus on my family.
Education had to be put on the backburner.
Unfortunately, by the time I decided to return to school in 2016, Child and Youth Care was not in the cards for me anymore.
In 2013, my oldest son was hit by a car, and he suffers a brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder. I didnāt want to burn myself out working with children all day and then dealing with my sonās needs at home.

āAt Georgian, I saw how much of a community we areā
I explored other options, and thatās how I ended up taking the Office Administration ā Executive (co-op) program.
While at Georgian the second time around, I also worked in the , as a director and then VP Administration with the ±ŲÓ®¹ŁĶų Studentsā Association (GCSA), and in the Centre for Marine Training and Research as an office assistant.
While working at Georgian, I saw how much of a community we are.
It doesnāt matter which department we work in or what we specialize in, weāre there for each other. When someone needs support, weāre there to provide it.
I never thought in my wildest dreams when I came back to Georgian that Iād be working for Georgian, but I couldnāt ask for a better place to work.
Lisa Lavigne, alumna from Georgianās Office Administration ā Executive (co-op) program (class of 2018) and currently an Academic Program Assistant at Georgianās Owen Sound Campus.