Tipi: Introduction to All Subjects
by Jessica Wesaquate and Andrea Rogers
"Tawow...Welcome" The
video clips are a demonstration of a tipi raising done with a group of grade
five and six students. Elder Glen Anaquod facilitated the tipi
raising and shared with the students the traditional Saulteaux teachings that
he was taught surrounding the tipi and ways of life.
Using the tipi to teach mathematics is a great opportunity to integrate other
subjects such as Social Studies, Language Arts, and Arts Education. Seek
community resources to bring an Elder into the classroom to share with the
students about the tipi teachings of the First Nations groups in your area. Remember
to follow traditional protocol.
Class Idea: Contact your community resource
person in your school or your local school board to organize a tipi raising
with your class. This will be a good way to have the traditional knowledge
behind the tipi taught before incorporating tipi mathematics into the classroom.
Some
curriculum connections
| Source: Saskatchewan
Evergreen Curriculum
Grade
One-Three –
Social Studies – Heritage – Family & local
community
Grade One –
Social Studies – Heritage – Families
in the Past
Grade One Sample Unit –
All About Me – What
Makes me Special
Grade One-Five –
Mathematics - Measurement
Grade Two/Three/Four/Six – Arts Education – Visual
Art
Grade Four –
Social studies – Heritage (Saskatchewan’s
First Peoples)
Grade Six/Seven –
Mathematics - Measurement – Geometry
Grade Seven –
Science – Structure
and Design
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.
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