Métis Foundational Knowledge Themes Moodle Cohorts

  • 1.  April 2024 Moodle Cohort

    Posted 03-27-2024 09:15
    Edited by RCTL Education Team 04-22-2024 09:03

    RLI Métis Foundational Knowledge Themes Moodle Course
    April 2024 Moodle Cohort!

    We hope you are excited to begin (or continue) your learning journey about the Métis Nation.
    Once the course begins, please LOG-IN to your MOODLE COURSE using the username and
    temporary password that was sent to your email address.

    Each week, an RLI Education Team Member will post two questions (TRIVIA and REFLECTION) in this post.

    RESPOND by clicking 'Reply' to ONE QUESTION OR BOTH QUESTIONS each week.

    ●  All responses will be collected as entries in a draw for a printed set of the Métis Foundational Knowledge Themes
    (the draw will take place at the end of the month).

    ●  You may respond to the questions at any time throughout the month; it does not have to be the same week that it was posted.

     ●  In your post, please ensure you reference which question you're responding to (For example: Week 1 Trivia)

    In a post below, please introduce yourself!

    What is your name?

    Where are you joining from?

    Why did you sign up for the Moodle Course?

    WEEK 1 TRIVIA:

    Métis in Alberta have spoken four languages traditionally. Which one is missing?
    Michif, French, English and ?

    WEEK 1 REFLECTION:

    "Michif language is the essence of the [Métis] culture. If you learn the language, you will learn who we are as a people." - Vice-President Dan Cardinal

    The languages spoken by Métis are inherently connected to Métis culture and identity. As you learn about the languages traditionally spoken by Métis, what do you learn about Métis identity and culture?

    WEEK 2 TRIVIA:

    The core Métis value of kinship, community, and networking is evident in which of the following traditions?

    a) celebrations

    b) sharing extra wild game

    c) traditional house design

    d) all the choices are correct

    WEEK 2 REFLECTION:

    “Without [their] culture, without that strong line from [their] forefathers, no [person] knows who [they] really [are]. If one does not know who [they are], [they] cannot possess pride or dignity for [themselves] or [their] people.”

    -Dr. Anne Anderson, Métis scholar and leader

     

    Dr. Anne Anderson highlights the key relationship between a person's identity and their cultural heritage. Why would it be important to celebrate distinct Métis culture in an educational community?

    WEEK 3 TRIVIA:

    Why do people commemorate Louis Riel on November 16th?

    WEEK 3 REFLECTION:

    “Through the hunt, Métis could understand themselves as a web of kin relations, expressing a collective political will through an assembly of inter-related families that choose a mutually agreed upon leadership.”

    –Adam Gaudry, “Kaa-tipeyimishoyaahk—‘We Are Those Who Own Ourselves’:
    A Political History of Métis Self-Determination in the North-West, 1830-1870” (PhD dissertation, University of Victoria, 2014), 29.


    Dr. Adam Gaudry highlights how wahkohtowin (being related or relationality) is a core framework guiding Métis governance. Is this a narrative you have encountered before when learning about the Métis? Why would it be important to reinforce wahkohtowin and otipemisiwak as Métis Ways of Being for learners?

    WEEK 4 TRIVIA:

    Match each term to the correct definition.

    Terms:

    1) Wahkohtowin

    2) Otipemisiwak

    Definitions:

    a) A word in the Cree language expressing the idea that the Métis lead, govern, care for, and own themselves.

    b) A word in the Cree language describing the importance of kinship among family, extended family, and relationships built extending to natural and spiritual worlds, human and non-human, living and not living worlds.

    WEEK 4 REFLECTION:

    Métis resilience is expressed in the way Métis name themselves as otipemisiwak. In what ways do Métis live out resilience?







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    RCTL Education Team
    Rupertsland Institute
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  • 2.  RE: April 2024 Moodle Cohort

    Posted 04-03-2024 10:49
    Edited by Lisa-Marie Szonyi 04-09-2024 16:31

    Taanishi! My name is Lisa-Marie and I am joining this cohort from beautiful Campbell River, BC on Vancouver Island. I have recently become the Patient Care and Housing Navigator for North Island Métis and feel that by by learning the history, culture and languages of the Métis people it will give me a greater understanding of how best to support the community I serve. :) I look forward to connecting with others in the cohort as well as learning about the strong nation I am blessed to have become a part of. :) In response to WEEK 1 Trivia: the missing language is nehiyawewin. WEEK 1 Reflection: As I learn about the languages traditionally spoken by the Métis, I am learning how strong, resilient and adaptable the Métis people are and how through oral traditions they have been able to retain the history, the culture and their identity throughout the terrible and trying times they had to endure not only in the past but even currently.



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    Lisa-Marie Szonyi
    North Island Metis
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  • 3.  RE: April 2024 Moodle Cohort

    Posted 04-17-2024 13:06
    Edited by Lisa-Marie Szonyi 04-18-2024 11:48

    Week 2 TRIVIA the answer is (d)all the choices are correct. The reflective question that was posed as to why it would be important to celebrate distinct Métis culture in an educational community I feel is an important one to really reflect upon not only personally but professionally as well. I agree with Dr. Anderson's statement and feel that by educating myself as to how the Métis nation has persevered through their hardships while still maintaining (and continually growing) their culture, their kinship and sense of community I will be able to learn how to best support the community I serve and be able to hopefully foster a strong sense of pride and dignity not only for themselves but for their community as a whole because they are learning how resilient, creative and strong their forefathers were in creating the history of not only the Métis nation but Canada.



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    Lisa-Marie Szonyi
    North Island Metis
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