Education
Learning tools to teach and enhance your own language and culture.
Learning tools to teach about other cultures in a multicultural world.
by Jessica Wesaquate and Andrea Rogers
Subject:
Social Studies
Theme:
Identity
Grade Level:
One to Three
Objectives:
Students will be able to know that a family is a type of group.
Students will be able to see how the Saulteaux peoples lived as a family unit.
Students will be able to indicate different types/forms of family.
Pre-requisite Knowledge:
families
Video Recommendations:
Elder Glen Anaquod's Tipi Raising
Materials:
family photos from home, tipi raising video clips
Introduction:
Have students bring family photos from home. Set up a bulletin board or place in the classroom where students can post their family photos. Discuss different types of family. Some students may bring photos of their foster families or guardians. As well, there will be some students who have deceased family members (some Cree peoples place pictures of deceased members away for a time span of a year). You can share this Cree teaching with your students.
The following video shares a Saulteaux perspective on the family unit:
Video: As the educator, you can choose to show your students the tipi raising video clips demonstrated by a grade 5/6 classroom, facilitated by Elder Glen Anaquod. Again, this is found on our website, aboriginalperspectives.ca. Glen shares that the children were responsible for putting up the tipi, and the grandmother taught them what to do. The women or mothers were the ones that kept the tipis so that the children always had a place to sleep. The times that the men put up the tipi would be for ceremonial purposes. As well, the men were the ones to paint on the tipi.
These are Saulteaux teachings to which Glen learned from his grandmother.
Glen Anaquod is from Muscowpetung First Nation in Saskatchewan.
Orally or using visual examples, show students the different types of
family units. It is a great idea to display these visual examples
around the classroom to indicate that there are all types of families.
Example of families:
blended, single-parent, extended, foster, guardian
Activity:
Assessment:
anecdotal records, rubrics
Math extension activity:
Graph the number of people in each students' family.
Aboriginal Perspectives is supported by the University of Regina, the Imperial Oil Foundation, the Canadian Mathematical Society and the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences.