Good morning, everybody.
We will get started at 11:00.
Cameras on. Mics muted.
This weekend is going to be hot!
Drink plenty of water.
Stay out of the sun if possible.
I want to ride my bike.
I want to go cycling.
I want to go kayaking.
She likes to go running at night.
Today’s agenda
· Verb
tenses: present perfect/present perfect continuous
· First
Nations lecture
Next week:
· Monday- Start reviewing grammar,
sentences, paragraphs
· Tuesday-
Continue review of grammar,
sentences,
paragraphs, verb tenses
Wednesday, June 30, FINAL DAY
no instruction day, marks day, no computer meeting
Email me during classtime, I will
email your mark to you
Verb tenses-
present perfect- started in
the past, continues until now, span of time
Sarah has lived in Canada since 2018.
Jung has worked at Starbucks since 2020.
We have studied in this class for nine weeks.
perfect – excellent, word for Latin doesn’t mean great,
fantastic
present perfect continuous- started in the past, continues until
now, span of time ‘ing’
Sarah has been living in Canada since 2018.
Jung has been working at Starbucks since 2020.
We have been studying in this class for nine weeks.
Sarah has lived in Canada since 2018.
Sarah has been living in Canada since 2018.
Jung has worked at Starbucks since 2020.
Jung has been working at Starbucks since 2020.
We have studied in this class for nine weeks.
We have been studying in this class for nine weeks.
For me, as an English speaker, I see these as interchangable. A
grammar book might disagree, but for actual everyday spoken and written usage,
you can use either one.
structure of present perfect
has/have + past participle
forms of verb-
present past participle
take took taken
put put put
eat ate eaten
walk walked walked
drive drove driven
structure of present perfect
has/have + past participle
Joe has taken the bus everyday since January.
Joe has been taking the bus everyday since January.
We have been studying since April.
We’ve been studying since April.
I has have been driving my car recently.
Your sister has been driving my car recently. present-
from the past until now
THESE
ARE MY SPEAKING NOTES, SO THEY MAY SEEM DISORGANIZED
·
750+ unmarked graves of First Nations have been
found, probably hundreds and hundreds, thousands more across Canada
Good website to
start
https://legacyofhope.ca/wherearethechildren/stories/
·
Focus of BC new curriculum- First Nations
First Nations ways
of knowing, culture, history in Canada
·
My school experiences- none of the history,
social studies, literature, English 12
First Poeple’s
English 12
·
science focused on First Nations
The focus was on
Europeans, settlers, White men in Canada
·
male-centred, Euro-centred
·
lots of First Nations kids in my school,
segregated
·
seemed normal
racism towards First Nations people
“Indians”
dismissive, belittling, negative
stereotypes
·
Tell this story
·
policy at my university – have to finish your
degree in seven years
student/ professor
–led initiative to change it to 10 yrs
·
racism against First Nations – BCTF AGM story
700 teachers
“equity-seeking
groups” wanted representation
·
First Contact Canada
http://aptn.ca/firstcontact/
First Contact of Europeans with
First Nations
Overview - introduction
·
First Nations -Who they are?
·
Small groups
“What do you know
about First Nations people in Canada?”
Generate ideas on
LCD
·
First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples constitute Indigenous peoples in Canada, also
called First Peoples. First Nations came
into common usage in the 1980s to replace the term Indians
·
Aboriginal
·
First
Nations- Indigenous people in the South (below Arctic Circle). Half of all
First Nations bands are in Ontario and BC.
·
Inuit
are the Indigenous
people who live in the North. Used to be called ‘Eskimo’- disparaging term from
French Esquimaux, from Montagnais ayas̆kimew ‘person who laces a snowshoe’.
Montagnais, or Innu, are the Indigenous inhabitants of an area they refer to as
Nitassinan, which comprises most of the northeastern portion of the present-day
province of Quebec and some eastern portions of Labrador.
Discredited etymology
‘raw fish eater’
Website: https://www.itk.ca/about-canadian-inuit/#nunangat
Show map: “Inuit Map”
·
Metis
a person of mixed Indigenous and Euro-American ancestry, in particular one of a
group of such people who in the 19th century constituted the so-called Metis
nation in the areas around the Red and Saskatchewan rivers. Metis comes from
the French word ‘métis’,
which means ‘mixed’.
·
Talk
about origin of the word ‘Indian’ due to geographical misunderstanding
·
Where did they come from?
·
First Nations creation myths/ stories
myth – legend,
fiction, story
Every group has a
creation story/myth
Bible-
Koran-
Greek myths –
Different First Nations have
different creation stories.
·
Read “The Beginning of the HaidiGwaii World” on
LCD
·
Talk about Raven
- prominent role
in the mythologies of the Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast,
including the Tsimishians, Haidas, Heiltsuks, Tlingits, Kwakwaka'wakw, Coast
Salish, Koyukons, and Inuit. The raven in these indigenous peoples' mythology
is the Creator of the world, but it is also considered a trickster god.
-two different
raven characters:
-the creator raven, responsible for bringing the world into
being and who is sometimes considered to be the individual who brought light to
the darkness
-the childish
raven, always selfish, sly, conniving, and hungry
·
Show pictures “Raven1” “Raven2” “Raven and the
First Men”
“Spirit of Haida
Gwaii”
·
Archeological theories about origins of First
Nations
·
200 000 years ago, Homo Sapiens in Africa
·
60 000 years ago, humans leave Africa
50 000 years ago
reach Australia
·
Second wave
35 000 years ago
reach Middle East and Central Asia
·
40 000 years ago into Europe
·
25 000 years ago- Ice Age, ice bridge between
Russia and Alaska
·
15 000 years ago humans cross The Bering Strait
into North America
***
·
Show video “Map Shows How Humans Migrated Across
the Globe” (2m30s)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJdT6QcSbQ0&list=RDCJdT6QcSbQ0&start_radio=1
Explore website, LCD
http://firstpeoplesofcanada.com/fp_groups/fp_groups_origins.html
talk about land bridge
MAYBE VIDEO https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M43TYldfqzc
(4m-13m)
·
Atlantic migration theory
Talk about
·
First Nations reactions to these scientific
theories
Put like on Blog
Listen to audio
(9m) EXCELLENT
Describe and
summarize controversies, competing theories for students
·
Another article about Salutrian/Ice Bridge
debate
http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/ancient-toddler-s-remains-re-ignite-native-origins-debate-1.2534423
CONTACT
·
cooperation- settlers dying of scurvy, lack of
Vitamin C
long-standing
problem for sailors
limey, pine needle
tea
·
Work through timeline
https://aboriginalconnections.wordpress.com/teacher-resources/bc-first-nations-historical-timeline/
FLESH OUT Treatment of FN- blanket
ceremony information
·
European settler to North America pushed First Nations
of their land and forced them to live in Reservations
·
Residential schools
Talk about
·
Between the 1860s and 1990s more than 150,000
First Nations, Inuit, and Métis children were required to attend Indian
Residential Schools, institutions operated by religious organizations funded by
the Federal Government.
·
The Canadian government removed First Nation
children from their families and communities and placed them in these
institutions.
·
Many children were inadequately fed, clothed and
housed, and many were abused, physically, emotionally and sexually. Their
languages and cultural practices were prohibited.
This is where the unmarked graves
come from. These are children who died while in the schools.
There are so many questions about
how this happened.
How did this happen?
How did these children die?
Why?
How could this have happened in Canada?
TEACHERRESOURCES
http://www.fnesc.ca/learningfirstpeoples/
https://www.ece.gov.nt.ca/files/Early-Childhood/ns_-_residential_schools_resource_-_second_edition.pdf
http://www.fnesc.ca/wp/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/PUB-LFP-IRSR-11-12-Pt1-2015-07-WEB.pdf
http://www.fnesc.ca/wp/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/PUB-LFP-IRSR11-12-DE-Pt2-2015-07-WEB.pdf
http://www.fnesc.ca/grade-11-12-indian-residential-schools-and-reconciliation/
·
VIDEO “Where Are the Children? Healing the Legacy
of the Residential Schools”
https://vimeo.com/27172950 (25m)
GO OVER THIS WEBSITE ON LCD
·
http://www.anishinabek.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/An-Overview-of-the-IRS-System-Booklet.pdf
·
Introduction to Truth and Reconciliation
Commission, Residential Schools
·
National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation
Opening ceremony:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/national-centre-truth-reconciliation-winnipeg-1.3301305
·
EXPLORE Website:
·
http://wherearethechildren.ca/en
Explore together
Walk through
Timeline
Choose
one of the stories. Listen or read the transcript, make notes.
Indian
Horse Ch 11-12? photocopy and read together
***
LOTS OF RESOURCES
SURVIVOR TESTIMONY:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wjrZpCJtNYk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vn6jbkPgTzM
·
Distribute “ConnieWalkerQuestions”, p.c.
·
LISTEN (13m56s)
OR
http://www.cbc.ca/player/play/2680244159/
OR
“ConnieWalker.mp3”
Students listen
and make notes
Afterward, get
into small groups and compare notes.
Discuss
as a class.
·
LISTEN to poem “MONSTER”, p.c. (3m,16s)
https://soundcloud.com/cbc-radio-one/i-hate-you-residential-school
OR
http://www.cbc.ca/radio/thecurrent/apr-3-2014-1.2908353/monster-by-poet-dennis-saddleman-i-hate-you-residential-school-i-hate-you-1.2908356
·
Highlights from TRC:
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2015/12/15/highlights-from-the-report-of-the-truth-and-reconciliation-commission-report_n_8812426.html
·
“MyLittleResidentialSchoolSuitcase”, p.c.
Read
aloud, discuss
·
Explain Gord Downey
The Sacred Path
·
“colonialism”, p.c.
·
“’Totem’ Module”
·
DON’T TEACH Rita Joe “I Lost My Talk”
·
“Two-Spirit” “Chrytos”
“Unentitled” from
here:
http://www.sfu.ca/lovemotherearth/02poetry/tea_and_bannock.pdf
THIS PART DONE
·
Appropriation of First Nations culture
·
Explain meaning of ‘cultural appropriation’
Gucci turban
·
Talk about 2015 Miss Canada dress
https://natalieast.com/miss-universe-canadas-national-costume-cultural-appropriation/
Show pics “Miss
Canada 1,2”
·
Other examples of a appropriation of First
Nations culture- music festivals
Show pics
“Headdress1,2,3” “Costume1”
Show video “Headdress-
A filmmaker recreates her great-grandfather’s portrait” (5m,43s)
·
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bc-women-searches-for-stolen-regalia-prince-george-1.4692057
The future of FN
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/youth-incarcerated-indigenous-half-1.4720019
“ForthisArcticstudent”, p.c. “JasmineKegel”pic
·
“My Moccasins Have Not Walked” work and student
poem
Adjective Forms
Try these for homework:
Choose the appropriate form of the adjective:
1.
Wendy was interested/ interesting in that book.
2.
I was challenged/ challenging by my old job.
3.
My old job was challenged/challenging. It was
hard but fun.
4.
The movie was disappointing/ disappointed.
5.
The teacher was disappointed/ disappointing with
her students' work.
6.
My dog gets confused/ confusing when I turn the
lights off.
7.
My cat's behavior is often confused/ confusing
to me.
8.
John's habits are irritated/ irritating to his
roommate.
9.
Seth feels irritated/ irritating by his
roommate's habits.
10.
I was bored/
boring at the movie.
11.
That movie was bored/ boring. That's why I left
the movie early.
12.
The little boy was terrified/ terrifying by the
scary movie.
13.
The movie was terrified/ terrifying because it
had many horrible, evil monsters in it.
14.
The child was delighted/ delighting/ delightful
by the delicious bowl of ice cream.
15.
Everyone on the team was thrilled/ thrilling to
win the championship!
16.
The green, slimy fuzz growing on the old food was disgusted/
disgusting.
17.
That movie is very depressed/ depressing because
the father dies at the end.
18.
Treasure Island is an excited/ exciting
book because it has a lot of adventures, pirates, and sword fights in it.
19.
The dog is always very excited/ exciting when we
let her ride in our car.
20.
The Wild Roller ride at the amusement park is very,
very fast and very excited/ exciting!
Proverb – saying, expression
No pain, no gain.
Easy come, easy go.
30 Most Popular
Proverbs in English for Students & Learners
1. Many hands make light work.
2. Strike while the iron is hot.
3. Honesty is the best policy.
Liars have to have good memories.
4. The grass is always greener on the other side of
the fence.
5. Don’t judge a book by its cover.
6. An apple a day keeps the doctor away.
7. Better late than never.
8. Don’t bite the hand that feeds you.
9. Rome wasn’t built in a day.
10. Actions speak louder than words.
Talk is cheap.
11. It’s no use crying over spilt milk.
12. Still waters run deep.
13. Curiosity killed the cat.
14. My hands are tied.
15. Out of sight, out of mind.
16. Easy come, easy go.
17. You can’t make an omelette without breaking a few
eggs.
18. The forbidden fruit is always the sweetest.
forbidden fruit
(allusion, reference to another text) –
Garden of Eden, Book
of Genesis, Old Testament
Emily Dickinson (1830–86)
Forbidden fruit a
flavor has
That lawful orchards mocks;
How luscious lies the
pea within
The pod that Duty locks!
19. If you scratch my back, I’ll scratch yours.
20. It’s the tip of the iceberg.
21. Learn to walk before you run
22. First things first
23. Don’t bite off more than you can chew
24. It’s better to be safe than sorry
25. The early bird catches the worm
26. Don’t make a mountain out of an anthill (molehill)
27. Where there’s a will, there’s a way
28. Always put your best foot forward
29. The squeaky wheel gets the grease
30. A rolling stone gathers no moss
Honorable Mention: 6 of Our Favorite Lesser-Known
Proverbs
1. When in Rome, do as the Romans do
2. Birds of a feather flock together
3. A stitch in time saves nine
4. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder
5. Those in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones
6. Absence makes the heart grow fonder
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