Traditional Métis Transportation
Lesson plan discusses construction and use of canoes, York boats, and the Red River cart, as well as the role of snowshoes, dogs, and horses.
Traditional Plant Knowledge of the Tsimshian: Unit Plan for Secondary Sciences, Social Studies, and Applied Skills
Recommended for: Science Grades 9-12; Resource Science (forests) Grades 11 and 12; Science and Technology Grade 11; Social Studies Grades 11-12; and Home Economics Grades 11-12.
Training Project for Indian School Liaison and Support Personnel in Special Education
The Transformational Indigenous Praxis Model: Stages for Developing Critical Consciousness in Indigenous Education
Transforming Graduate Studies through Decolonization: Sharing the Learning Journey of a Specialized Cohort
Treaties and the Treaty Relationship: Educator's Guide
Tsimshian Involvement in the Forest Sector
Recommended for Grade 10-11 Social Studies and First Nations Studies.
Turtle Island Reads Teacher Guide: Book Summaries, Activities & Advocacy
The three books are The Marrow Thieves by Cherie Dimaline, Those Who Run in the Sky by Aviaq Johnston, and Will I See? by David Alexander Robertson.
Turtle Island Reads Teacher's Guide: Introduction & Pre-Reading Activity
Two Ways of Knowing: Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Scientific Knowledge
Includes explanation of the main features of the two knowledge systems and three brief case studies: Indigenous plant classification and nomenclature; pine mushroom industry in Northwestern BC; smallpox epidemic of 1862; and AIDS and its impact on Indigenous populations.
Recommended for Grade 8 Biology.
Unipkaaqtuat Arvianit: Traditional Inuit Stories from Arviat: Volume One and Two: Traditional Story Study
Geared toward Grades 9 to 12.
Unlearning Colonial Identities While Engaging in Relationality: Settler Teachers’ Education-as-Reconciliation
Unsettling Settler Shame in Schooling: Re-Imagining Responsible Reconciliation in Canada
Unwitting Soldiers: The Working Life of Matron Hiscocks at the Cootamundra Girls Home
Using the Medicine Wheel for Discussing Aboriginal Issues in the Social Studies Classroom
Using the Self-Directed Search with American Indian High School Students
Using the WISC-III With Navajo Children: A Need for Local Norms
The Value of Perseverance: Using Dakota Culture to Teach Mathematics
Variation in Instructional Discourse Features: Cultural or Linguistic? Evidence from Inuit and Non-Inuit Teachers of Nunavik
Visible Minorities: Deaf, Blind, and Special Needs Adult Native Literacy Access
We Are All Treaty People
Special themed issue of Canada's History's children's magazine Kayak (September 2018). Suitable for ages 7-12.
Weaving Ways: Indigenous Ways of Knowing in Classrooms and Schools: An Introductory Guide
Where Are All The Native Grads
Examines the factors affecting education of Aboriginal youth, creating graduation rates that lag behind that of their non-Aboriginal classmates.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.44.
Yaqui World View and the School: Conflict and Accommodation
A Year of Crisis: Memory and Meaning in a Navajo Community’s Struggle for Self-Determination
Pagination
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