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Showing posts from March, 2021

Coyote and Buffalo

  Big Ideas: (time 9:55) Educators are encouraged to focus on four dominant themes throughout their planning and study of the story Coyote and Buffalo . The themes integral to the story are 1) self-regulation; 2) consequences; 3) respect; and 4) responsibility. The following are suggestions and information that will assist educators in meeting their learning objectives for their students. Backgrounder: Teachers are encouraged to read the summaries and reflections found in the book Not Extinct: Keeping the Sinixt Way that reference and relate to this story. Several important topics and concepts are mentioned, such as: Connection with the spirit world; Ancestors – continue to be a part of our lives; Desecration of burials and burial sites, the Vallican example; Respect for the dead/ancestral remains; Sinixt cultural practices and protocols around death and the grieving process; Living symbols of loss and deep inner pain; Decolonization;

Takwiya

(time 9:55) Big Ideas: Educators are encouraged to focus on four dominant themes throughout their planning and study of the story Takwiya . The themes integral to the story are 1) storytelling as a story within a story; 2) informed decision-making; 3) loyalty and friendship; and 4) childhood: responsibilities, fun, and safety. The following are suggestions and information that will assist educators in meeting their learning objectives for their students. Backgrounder: Teachers are encouraged to read the summaries and reflections found in the book Not Extinct: Keeping the Sinixt Way that reference and relate to this story. Several important topics and concepts are mentioned, such as: Storytelling, teaching and supporting appropriate behaviour, life skills; Mob mentality; Learning: paying attention, listening, being respectful, questioning; Existence of evil in the world; Maintaining integrity when challenging others; Evolution as a process of moving through ex

Chipmunk and Owl Woman

  (time 9:53) Big Ideas: Educators are encouraged to focus on four dominant themes throughout their planning and study of the story Chipmunk and Owl Woman. The themes integral to the story are 1) storytelling, 2) cultural appropriation, 3) trust, and 4) gratitude. The following are suggestions and information that will assist educators in meeting their learning objectives for their students. Backgrounder: Teachers are encouraged to read the summaries and reflections found in the book Not Extinct: Keeping the Sinixt Way that reference and relate to this story. Several important topics and concepts are mentioned, such as: Ceremony – evolution, devolution, a fluid process; Contemporary efforts to conjure up ceremony – ultimate disrespect; Stories – keeping cultural perspective alive; Medicine Wheel; Burial practices; Huckleberry Ceremony – clues to carry forward; Vision Questing – youth, sumix, spirit power, song; Certain privileges or abunda