School Curriculum about Canada's discredited Indian Residential School System launched

From Legacy Of Hope Foundation

NWT and NU Curriculum on Residential Schools Unveiled

Click here to download press release

OTTAWA (October 3, 2012) - A comprehensive residential schools curriculum package developed in partnership with the Legacy of Hope Foundation (LHF), the Government of the Northwest Territories and the Government of Nunavut was presented on October 2, 2012 in Yellowknife, NT. The Honourable Eva Aariak, Premier and Minister of Education of the Government of Nunavut and the Honourable Jackson Lafferty, Minister of Education, Culture and Employment with the Government of the Northwest Territories unveiled the curriculum at the beginning of Territorial-wide teacher training for social and northern studies teachers. The first edition of The Residential School System in Canada: Understanding the Past - Seeking Reconciliation - Building Hope for Tomorrow was presented to Marie Wilson, Commissioner of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

During the event, Minister Lafferty stated, "The learning activities in this unit are built on the voices and the stories of the former residential school students and others... they did this disregarding the pain and grief it caused them personally, because they wanted us to know."

Originating from the LHF's 100 Years of Loss: The Residential School System in Canada Edu-kit (a pan-Canadian curriculum package) that began distribution in March 2012, the Northern curriculum package is an expanded version that represents Northern perspectives and experiences of the Residential School System. Comprised of a teacher's guide, timeline, and community resources, topics covered in the package include life before residential schools, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's apology to former students, Survivor stories, as well as historical and cultural information. A DVD featuring multimedia resources is also included.

The Legacy of Hope Foundation is pleased and honoured to be part of this important and historic collaboration and welcomes the opportunity to assist other jurisdictions to integrate this important subject into their curricula. President Richard Kistabish stresses the important role that education plays in reconciliation: "Education is necessary for Canadians to move forward on the path towards understanding and reconciliation, and it is our youth who will lead us there."

For more information about the 100 Years of Loss Edu-kit or The Residential School System in Canada Northern curriculum, please contact the Legacy of Hope Foundation or visit http://www.legacyofhope.ca/ or http://www.missinghistory.ca/  

 

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From The huffingtonpost.ca

Now in Schools: The Untold History of Canada's Forced Assimilation

Wayne K. Spear, Writer, Communications Consultant - Posted: 10/04/2012 

This week the governments of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories launched a "first of its kind" curriculum, the focus of which is Canada's discredited Indian Residential School System. The Honourable Jackson Lafferty, Deputy Premier of the Northwest Territories, and the Honourable Eva Aariak, Premier of Nunavut, attended a Yellowknife ceremony to mark Canada's formal commencement of a project urged 16 years ago by the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples (RCAP) and urged again in more recent years by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, or TRC.

It happens that I played a small role in the development of this curriculum, as an editor and writer. I mention this by way of disclosure and to breach the point that this work has constituted a personal as well as a professional challenge for over a decade. The development and "implementation" of school curriculum is an enormous undertaking, which bears considerations of history, bureaucracy, ethics, politics, economics and academic standards.

I recall the long conversations about the tangled business of curricula that I had with the late Gail Valaskakis, a former colleague, Aboriginal communications pioneer, and Concordia professor. (Curriculum was one of the very few ambitious projects she took on but did not finish.) As early as the 1990s, those of us tasked with writing about the Indian residential schools well understood that the education system was a final frontier, even a reckoning.

By this grand way of stating the problem, as a reckoning, I mean the following: until there is an honest, fair, and concerted effort to teach future Canadian citizens about the history of this country, no settlement of the historical account or reconciliation of the parties concerned can be a matter of credible prospect. As Shelagh Rogers once told me,

I considered myself a fairly informed person, and yet my knowledge of residential schools was empty. Why didn't I know this when I was going to school? It made me question who tells us what our history is, when it comes packaged in a textbook that goes out all across the country. I don't think there was even a reference to residential schools in my history textbooks. What is the real history of Canada? I'm in love with this country, and now I'm finding out after years of loving the beauty of the country that the way we came to be a country was by taking things and stealing things. We're living off of stolen land. This made me question our very ability to stand with integrity on this land.


Some of you will doubtless cast this away as a "liberal" perspective, and in the years that I've written about Canada's Indian Act policies I've had to field my share of indignant emails and letters from readers who'll have none of it. "Get over it," they say, adding (incongruously) that nobody has it better than the natives. I learned years ago that some dogs are in fact too old for the new trick, and so my interest in educating the young -- not a trick, but rather a tricky affair -- has only been fattened on such scraps.

Beginning this fall, Nunavut and the NWT will dedicate 25 classroom hours to a consideration of Canada's century-long church and state effort to assimilate Inuit, Métis and First Nation children. While sexual violence against forcibly institutionalized children -- a topic with which the world has lately become sickeningly familiar -- is a part of this story, the core theme of this century-long system is the proposition that the Indian must be assimilated, by whatever means required.

The curator Jeff Thomas posed the question, at the entrance of his 2002 National Archives of Canada Indian residential school exhibit, Where Are the Children, "Is assimilation a good thing?" It was to me then, as it is now, the essential question. (My only quibble, which I presented to him at the Ottawa launch, was that he ought to have asked instead "Is forced assimilation a good thing?")

The point of this education exercise, in my view, is neither to demonize the workers of the church and government, nor to suggest that Canadians toss themselves into a sea of guilt. Both are useless, even counter-productive. Instead, I look forward to Canadians learning this piece of Canadian history in its full human complexity, perhaps pondering the question "is forced assimilation a good thing?"

The relationship between native people and the governments of what became Canada was not always the discouraging affair it is today. The mess of the present has a recoverable past which may be studied, deliberated and debated. Disagreements, such as over policies and intentions, are themselves useful -- provided they are intellectualy honest and grounded in the substance of Canada's history.

Only with a more complete and integrated understanding of how Canada came to be a nation spanning from sea to sea can its citizens stand, as Shelagh Rogers put it, "with integrity on this land." I would add that a fuller and more nuanced understanding of the past and present legal and historical relationships of indigenous people and the crown will serve our children and grandchildren well. In any case, the country took a decisive step this week, and I expect that there will be no turning back.

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From CBC.ca

N.W.T., Nunavut launch residential school curriculum

High school program will teach students about legacy and history of infamous schools

CBC News - Posted: Oct 2, 2012 6:51 PM CT

The history of residential schools will now be formally taught in high schools in Nunavut and the Northwest Territories.Residential school curriculum launch2:19

The governments of the Northwest Territories and Nunavut have joined forces to create a mandatory curriculum for high school students to learn the legacy and history of residential schools.

"We all need to realize this very, very key point: that residential schools are not aboriginal history, this is Canadian history based on Canadian laws that aboriginal people had no say in," said Marie Wilson, one of the three commissioners of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

The new program features 12 activities, each based around an interview with a former residential school student, a leader, or around a national news piece about the infamous schools.The new program features 12 activities, each based around an interview with a former residential school student, a leader, or around a national news piece about the infamous schools. (CBC)

Teachers, politicians and leaders from across the two territories gathered in Yellowknife for the curriculum's launch.

The 25 hour curriculum has 12 activities, each of which are built around an interview with a former residential school student or leader or a national piece of news, such as Prime Minister Stephen Harper's apology to former students in 2008.

"The learning activities in this unit are built on the voices and the stories of the former residential school students and others... they did this disregarding the pain and grief it caused them personally, because they wanted us to know," said Jackson Lafferty, the N.W.T. Minister of Education, Culture and Employment.

Students will follow an arc starting with how aboriginal children learned and were independent before residential schools. Then the course moves into the period when children were forcibly taken from their homes and families and sent - often hundreds of miles away - to the church-run schools.

Many were sexually, physically and psychologically abused. Most lost their culture, traditions and language.

However, the arc ends on a positive note. John Stewart, the coordinator of social studies and northern studies, helped to develop the course.

"The message of everyone that we interviewed and gave us guidance was 'you can't leave students in that dark place'. We need to show them some of the many, many opportunities for hope, for healing, for change, that are current now," said Stewart.

Over the next two days, social studies and northern studies teachers will prepare to teach teenagers the new program in Nunavut and the Northwest Territories. Many hope the curriculum will reach even further.

"Nunavut and Northwest Territories are pioneering this. At this point and I am so very proud of that, and I truly hope that it will expand to the rest of our nation," said Eva Aariak, the premier of Nunavut.

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