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Steinhauer, Noella – Canadian Social Studies, 1993
Describes life on a Canadian Indian reserve and discusses the role of the community in individuals' lives. Examines reasons why Canadian Indian teachers want to teach on the reserves. Concludes that the opportunity to serve as role models and a commitment to the community are the major reasons for teaching in these schools. (CFR)
Descriptors: Canada Natives, Community, Community Role, Elementary Secondary Education
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Steinhauer, Noella – Canadian Social Studies, 1992
Discusses self-government among Canada's Native peoples. Examines the idea of having each family represented within tribal government. Explains that Canadian government policy forces a departure from the traditional ways of selecting tribal leadership. Argues that Native Canadians must find their own means of self-determination if they hope to end…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indians, Community Coordination, Foreign Countries
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Couture, Jean-Claude – Canadian Social Studies, 1997
Asks the question: To what can teachers realistically expect students to be committed in the field of citizenship education when governments are consistently cutting back on their own involvement in public life? Concludes that principles of community and social justice remain valid and relevant to young people. (MJP)
Descriptors: Alienation, Citizenship Education, Civics, Community
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Shields, Patricia – Canadian Social Studies, 1999
Describes activities that can be adapted for students in elementary to high school grade levels that link teaching about local government to the concept of community and provide starting points for project ideas centering on the active involvement of students, teachers, and local government officials. (CMK)
Descriptors: Community, Democracy, Educational Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education
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Rothe, J. Peter – Canadian Social Studies, 1993
Describes the community participation facet of the eleventh-grade social studies curriculum for British Columbia. Proposes a four-stage model to identify, study, and propose recommendations about a community issue or problem. Suggests that social action based on empirical research improves social studies instruction. (CFR)
Descriptors: Citizen Role, Citizenship Education, Community Involvement, Curriculum Design
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Clark, Penney – Canadian Social Studies, 1999
Contends that many educators believe that social studies as a subject does not have a future in Canadian schools systems. Asserts that social studies is essential and must address four critical areas to actualize its potential for attaining citizenship goals: content, critical thinking, community action, and caring. (CMK)
Descriptors: Citizen Role, Citizenship Education, Community Action, Critical Thinking
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Shields, Patricia – Canadian Social Studies, 2000
Discusses activities, adaptable for elementary through high school levels, for learning about the people who work in local government and the programs local governments provide. Explains that the activities are useful starting points for project ideas that enlist the involvement of students, teachers, and local government officials. (CMK)
Descriptors: Community, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Educational Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education
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Zook, Doug – Canadian Social Studies, 1998
Draws on the author's experience and research to explore how strong ideological beliefs impact social studies teaching in religious schools. Suggests a concerted effort by teachers in religious schools, in particular Mennonite schools, to reflect the ethos of the school. Describes the experience of teaching in a religious school. (CMK)
Descriptors: Community, Cultural Pluralism, Educational Environment, Foreign Countries
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Bunning, Carol – Canadian Social Studies, 1999
Explains that sentencing circles are a form of traditional Canada Native justice in which the entire community is involved to combat offenders. Provides a unit plan on sentencing circles for social studies in order to teach students about the need for sentencing circles in Native communities. Provides sample lesson plans and an example worksheet.…
Descriptors: Canada Natives, Community Role, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Cultural Awareness
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Shields, Patricia – Canadian Social Studies, 2000
Describes a lesson consisting of activities such as a mock town hall meeting, forming a lobby group, and attending a town hall meeting. Focuses on community-based issues and the role of citizens in bringing about change at the local level. (CMK)
Descriptors: Citizen Role, Community, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Educational Strategies
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Werner, Walt – Canadian Social Studies, 2004
Political cartoons are animated through visual analogies that imply a likeness between the event portrayed in the image and the issue on which the cartoonist is making comment. Although many kinds of analogies can be used, meanings arise as the viewer is able to recognize and interpret them. This becomes difficult, though, when a cartoon's analogy…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Political Issues, Politics, Cartoons
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Steinhauer, Noella – Canadian Social Studies, 1997
Considers the effects of commercialism and the current mania for name brand clothing on the lives of Canada's young Native Americans. Argues that the adoption of assimilationist and mainstream cultural values grows from the Indians' lack of any real political power. Postulates that young Indian women are particularly vulnerable to this tendency.…
Descriptors: Alienation, Canada Natives, Clothing, Community Characteristics
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Mock, Karen R. – Canadian Social Studies, 1997
Reviews the moral issues and political circumstances of the Holocaust. Identifies four prototypical participants and discusses their role and actions in terms of personal decisions. These are: Victims, Perpetrators, Bystanders, and Activists. Concludes with a call for individuals to examine their own efforts at combatting bigotry and hatred. (MJP)
Descriptors: Anti Semitism, Civil Liberties, Community Responsibility, Foreign Countries
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Kelebay, Yarema Gregory – Canadian Social Studies, 1996
Analyzes the political arguments and special interests surrounding the recent referendum regarding the separation of Quebec from Canada. Characterizes the separatists' campaign as defined by lies, evasion, and demagoguery. Discusses the political reconfiguring occurring among the profederalists. (MJP)
Descriptors: Activism, Civics, Community Control, Current Events
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Mock, Karen – Canadian Social Studies, 1995
Maintains that the Holocaust was the catalyst for Canadian antihate legislation. Maintains that, to combat racism and bigotry, it is necessary to use three important tools: (1) the law; (2) community action; and (3) education. Describes some contemporary realities and remedies in the struggle against racism and hate in Canada. (CFR)
Descriptors: Anti Semitism, Antisocial Behavior, Blacks, Canada Natives