[September 2021-2023] UNBC Bachelor of Education (Elementary) Program Template
 
E³ - Em's Educational Experience

Standard 9

Educators respect and value the history of First Nations, Inuit and Metis in Canada and the impact of the past on present and the future. Educators contribute towards truth, reconciliation and healing. Educators foster a deeper understanding of ways of knowing and being, histories, and cultures of First Nations, Inuit and Metis.

EDUC 491 Practicum Reflection — Incorporating FPPL and Indigenous worldviews into the curriculum.

I con­tin­ue to fol­low­ing the FPPL in my design of les­son activ­i­ties and when guid­ing dis­cus­sions to allow stu­dents to become reflec­tive prac­ti­tion­ers in their learn­ing.  Dis­cus­sions in kinder­gart­ner are not deep, but stu­dents make fas­ci­nat­ing and cre­ative con­nec­tions.  I found many stu­dents need­ed prompt­ing for a guid­ed dis­cus­sion. ome stu­dents were anx­ious about speak­ing in class and those stu­dents who excelled at sto­ry telling would some­times take over a dis­cus­sion top­ic by going off on a tan­gent unre­lat­ed ques­tion or top­ic.  Some stu­dents would raise their hand only to for­get what they want­ed to say when it was their turn to speak.  Learn­ing oral­ly through sto­ry, song and group dis­cus­sion is the at the heart of ELA stud­ies for kinder­garten so it very much braids with the FPPL.

 

My cross-cur­ric­u­lar ELA Les­son Unit did include Indige­nous world­views with the First Nations chil­dren’s sto­ry, “Trudy’s Heal­ing Stone.”  Stu­dents found their own heal­ing stone and paint­ed it dur­ing their art block. 

In addi­tion, the class did an ELA/Art les­son for Nisga’a Hobiy­ee.

EDUC 490 Practicum Reflection — Incorporating FPPL and Indigenous worldviews into the curriculum.

Fol­low­ing the FPPL, I try to design my lessons to be inclu­sive and sup­port diverse stu­dents who have aca­d­e­m­ic abil­i­ties. For Math, this means giv­ing time for stu­dents to prac­tice, and encour­ag­ing stu­dents who think they are not good at it by sup­port­ing them through explic­it instruc­tion. In my lat­est practicum, one stu­dent did not believe she could do long divi­sion, so after show­ing a few exam­ples we worked togeth­er and solved a prob­lem. I lead her through the steps until final­ly she could find the solu­tion. Praise, sup­port and patience is need­ed — and not just by the teacher but from the class as well. I encour­aged stu­dents to have a growth mind­set and to be empa­thet­ic and sup­port­ive of each oth­er in their studies.

Dur­ing the EDUC 490 Practicum, I inter­wove Indige­nous ways of being and his­to­ry into my var­i­ous sub­jects.   One of the month­ly cross-cur­ric­u­lar themes was col­ors and pro­mot­ing a growth mind­set.  In Careers, we stud­ied the psy­chol­o­gy and sym­bol­ism of col­ors and dif­fer­ences between hav­ing a fixed ver­sus growth mind­set.  It was inter­est­ing to see how many of the grade 7 stu­dents were moti­vat­ed by what reward they received rather than the learn­ing expe­ri­ence itself.  This remind­ed me of the naïvety and youth­ful­ness of my stu­dents.  I sus­pect that fos­ter­ing a growth mind­set will be an going challenge.

In our Careers class, we dis­cussed  how var­i­ous cul­tures inter­pret col­ors dif­fer­ent­ly in our les­son unit called the Psy­chol­o­gy of Col­ors.  This nat­u­ral­ly led to dis­cussing orange shirt day. One of my Indige­nous stu­dents wears the same Every Child Mat­ters orange hood­ie to school every­day, so I asked him what that shirt meant to him.  Unfor­tu­nate­ly, the stu­dents in my class do no yet have a deep­er under­stand­ing of Res­i­den­tial schools and its sig­nif­i­cance.  I am left won­der­ing is it some­thing they will take to heart as time goes by (as learn­ing takes and patience), or is this top­ic some­thing we need to dis­cuss and learn about at the ear­li­er grades.  I wor­ry as it is dark his­to­ry for Cana­da and even dark­er one for its vic­tims.  
 

For Remem­brance day,  I taught a Grade art les­son which con­nect­ed with the solemn hol­i­day by mak­ing red origa­mi pop­pies.  Pri­or to the art activ­i­ty, we dis­cussed the poem and the sym­bol­ism of the pop­py, In Flan­ders Fields, and its con­nec­tion to war vet­er­ans. We also dis­cussed how when Indige­nous war vets fought for our coun­try over­seas they were treat­ed as equals. How­ev­er, when they returned home after the war, they remained sec­ond class cit­i­zens in Cana­da. They did not get the same respect or vet­er­an ben­e­fits as oth­er non-Indige­nous war vets.  Indige­nous war vets could not even par­tic­i­pate dur­ing the Remem­brance Day Legion cer­e­monies until 1995. Because of this, they have their own solemn day called Nation­al Indige­nous Vet­er­ans Day on Novem­ber 8th.  To sup­port Stan­dard 9, I must also teach Indige­nous his­to­ry and the impor­tance of  Truth and Rec­on­cil­i­a­tion, but I find it a lit­tle frus­trat­ing on how teach­ing resources are lim­it­ed and how our social stud­ies con­tent does not explic­it­ly set the con­tent to sup­port teach­ing this.  Instead, teach­ers must be cre­ative and include it in Eng­lish lan­guage arts, or oth­er sub­jects that have more open end­ed con­tent requirements. 

In my final Careers class, after learn­ing about col­ors and the impor­tance of hav­ing a growth mind­set, I decid­ed to teach  my class about the Indige­nous Med­i­cine Wheel, or Sacred Hoop (CLICK FOR CANVA PRESENTATION) . Close to half of the class did not rec­og­nize the Med­i­cine Wheel. Sur­pris­ing­ly, one Indige­nous girl com­plained, “Do I have to do this? I already know this.” She was already hav­ing a bad day pri­or to this les­son, so she did not see in the mood to dis­cuss it. I gave her space and con­tin­ued on with the les­son for the ben­e­fit of the rest of the class.  It was hard to tell if she was annoyed at cov­er­ing this top­ic in class, or if some exter­nal issue was mak­ing her upset. Her peers who come from var­i­ous cul­tur­al back­grounds includ­ing the local Indige­nous pop­u­la­tion seemed inter­est­ed in cov­er­ing the med­i­cine wheel con­cept. When I asked about what the col­ors meant in the Med­i­cine Wheel, one stu­dent joked that its col­ors rep­re­sent­ed the dif­fer­ent races of peo­ple.  This stu­dent often jokes when he is anx­ious or bored, but every­one was shocked to learn that he was right! After which, he boast­ed and was quite proud of his hap­py acci­dent. I point­ed out that each quad­rant in the cir­cle was equal, and this sym­bol­izes the equal­i­ty between races is need­ed for bal­ance. We don’t want one group dom­i­nat­ing over anoth­er group. We also explored how each the wheel’s four quad­rants sym­bol­ize the sea­sons, four winds, ele­ments, stages of life and our aspects of well-being.  Final­ly, after learn­ing of the var­i­ous rep­re­sen­ta­tions, I had the class write down on their own med­i­cine wheel what they do to sup­port their men­tal, emo­tion­al, phys­i­cal and spir­i­tu­al well-being. For many boys, this was play­ing video games. I can­not blame them as I am a kin­dred spir­it in that regards.  For some of the girls it was draw­ing, or read­ing.  Some of the Indige­nous stu­dents liked phys­i­cal activ­i­ties best such as bas­ket­ball or mar­tial arts. It was a fun and inclu­sive way to share and learn togeth­er in our own cir­cle of respect as be built on strength­en­ing our rec­i­p­ro­cal rela­tion­ships.  My only regret is that it was my farewell les­son. I wish them the best.

There was one more inter­est­ing note to make.  No where did I observe any land acknowl­edge­ment in class.  I am not even sure we did it dur­ing the Remem­brance Day assem­bly. I make it a cus­tom to do so before pre­sent­ing any les­son relat­ing to Indige­nous knowl­edge, world­views or his­to­ry.  When I read out the fol­low­ing acknowl­edge­ment I was asked about the word unced­ed:

We would like to humbly acknowl­edge that we have the priv­i­lege to be liv­ing and learn­ing on the unced­ed lands belong­ing to the Gitxsan, and Tsimshi­an peo­ple.We are grate­ful for the oppor­tu­ni­ty to reside in these ter­ri­to­ries and are com­mit­ted to learn­ing and teach­ing the cul­ture and his­to­ry of this land.

I explained that the land was nev­er legal­ly ced­ed, or giv­en up to the Cana­di­an gov­ern­ment (tech­ni­cal­ly the Crown), through a treaty or oth­er agree­ment. The land was tak­en from them. Even today, no treaty exists for many of the First Nations in B.C., and I for one am grate­ful to have the chance to live here. I took a Pro‑D sem­i­nar on land acknowl­edge­ment, but they said to do it only for spe­cial occa­sions as if it would dimin­ish the mes­sage.  I am still learn­ing about how to effec­tive­ly teach about land acknowl­edge and bet­ter sup­port the BCTC Stan­dard Nine. Through expe­ri­ence and patience, I believe I will even­tu­al­ly find a my balance.

The fol­low­ing is one sym­bol­ic inter­pre­ta­tion of the Med­i­cine Wheel for well-being:
Trib­al-Trade-Med­i­cine-Wheel-Poster-PDF‑1