The Bear Facts
Humourous animated short involves a ill-equipped European "discovering" the Inuit homeland and promptly planting flags everywhere as a sign of ownership and an Inuit hunter's response. Accompanying material: The Bear Facts: Lesson Plan.
Duration: 3:58.
The Bear Facts: Lesson Plan
Guide to accompany film, The Bear Facts. Target audience Grades one to three in the subject areas of History, Social Sciences, First Nations and Humanities.
Becoming First Americans: Explaining a Polybian-Indian Movement in the American Southeast
Before the Redskins Were the Redskins: The Use of Native American Team Names in the Formative Era of American Sports, 1857-1933
Behind the Blockades
'Behold the Tears': Photography as Colonial Witness
Being Allies: Exploring Indigeneity and Difference in Decolonized Anti-oppressive Spaces
Being American: Traditional, Bicultural, and Assimilated: The American Indian Dilemma
Being and Belonging: The State of the Field
Benang: From the Heart
The "Bended Elbow" News, Kenora 1974: How a Small-Town Newspaper Promoted Colonization
Bernice Sayese
Chronicles the life and works of the first Aboriginal woman to receive the Prince Albert Citizen of the Year Award.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.26.
Best Practices: Does it Mean the Same Thing in the Aboriginal Community as it Does in the Health Authorities When it Comes to Diabetes Care?
Between the Sands and a Hard Place?: Aboriginal Peoples and the Oil Sands
Beyond The Pale: Whiteness as Innocence in Education
Biculturalism in Post-Secondary Aboriginal Education: An Inuit Example
Big Nose and his Painted Elk Skin
Bill C-44 : An Act to Amend the Canadian Human Rights Act
The Binary of Meaning: Native/American Indian Media in the 21st Century
Bishops Back Call to Improve Race Relations in Prince Albert
Black Dollars Go Everywhere But To Blacks
Black History Intertwined With Native Tribes
'Black is Beautiful', and Indigenous: Aboriginality and Authorship in Australian Popular Music
Black Lines, White Spaces: Towards Decoding a Rhetoric of Indian Identity
"Blackfellas" Basketball: Aboriginal Identity and Anglo-Australian Race Relations in Regional Basketball
Blowing Smoke Out Your....
Discusses a questionable comment made on the radio by host T. J. Conner regarding the Olympic Torch visit stopping in Curve Lake to "buy smokes".
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.