Métis Foundational Knowledge Themes Moodle Cohorts

  • 1.  November 2022 Moodle Cohort

    Posted 10-24-2022 11:30
    Edited by Kimberley Fraser-Airhart 11-22-2022 08:48

    Taanishii hello everyone! Welcome to the

    RLI Métis Foundational Knowledge Themes Moodle Course
    November 2022 Moodle Cohort.

    We hope that you are excited to begin (or continue) your learning journey about the Métis Nation.
    Once the course begins on November 1, please login 
    to the MOODLE COURSE ensure you have proper access to everything.

    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 a collected as entries in a draw for a printed set of the Métis Foundational Knowledge Themes (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?
    What is one question you would like to have answered about the Métis through this course?

    Please complete this 2 minute survey so we can have a successful cohort together:
    Cohort Zoom Call Gatherings Survey

    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?

    ------------------------------
    Kimberley Fraser-Airhart
    Rupertsland Institute
    ------------------------------


  • 2.  RE: November 2022 Moodle Cohort

    Posted 11-01-2022 22:07
    Tansi!
    I'm Victoria Scattergood! I'm in Airdrie (region 3), but work in Calgary.
    I want to learn more about our culture, past and present. After starting my new job at the start of the year working as a designer for 49Dzine, I've been exposed to so much culture, Cherokee, Blackfoot and Cree mostly - I've discovered things I had no idea were related to Metis and I just need to know more! I like to know things from the /beginning/, sadly my brain is like a train and has a single track sometimes haha

    I really don't know if I have /one/ question. I find I have questions after I learn something new that doesn't have a completion point I want/need.

    ------------------------------
    Victoria Scattergood
    ------------------------------



  • 3.  RE: November 2022 Moodle Cohort

    Posted 11-03-2022 10:15
    Hi, 

    I'm Aura Leddy. My family comes from the St Albert and Lac St Anne areas. I grew up and currently live in Edmonton. I work in a school, providing supports for Indigenous youth. I signed up so i could see some different framing of the concepts I have grown up with. I want these different framings so I can explain concepts to my non-Indigenous coworkers in an inclusive way.

    I don't really have a question as of now, but I am hoping to hear new perspectives from those who are a part of this.

    ------------------------------
    Aura Leddy
    ------------------------------



  • 4.  RE: November 2022 Moodle Cohort

    Posted 11-07-2022 14:12
    Responding to Week 1 Trivia and Reflection 
    Trivia: it is nehiyawewin
    Reflection: By learning of the languages and the stories that go with it, you are able to hear the values, beliefs, and perspectives that shape Metis identity and culture. This is important since there are a lot of pressures in the world that do not necessarily encourage embracing the languages traditionally spoken. Perhaps by giving a language a higher perceived value, would aid in efforts to revitalize languages such as michif.

    ------------------------------
    Aura Leddy
    ------------------------------



  • 5.  RE: November 2022 Moodle Cohort

    Posted 11-08-2022 17:39
    Taanishii I am Joel Gamache 
    I am joining from Okotoks Alberta and originally from Laurier Manitoba 
    I signed up for this course to learn more about Métis in Alberta and our culture 
    I am most interested to find and highlight métis connections to southern Alberta. Our schools in the south are craving it. 


    ------------------------------
    Joel Gamache
    Livingstone Range School Division
    ------------------------------



  • 6.  RE: November 2022 Moodle Cohort

    Posted 11-08-2022 17:43
    Week 1 

    Reflections 
    Learning about the language and its adaptability. This supports the resilience and ingenuity of our people. 

    Trivia   - Cree 



    ------------------------------
    Joel Gamache
    Livingstone Range School Division
    ------------------------------



  • 7.  RE: November 2022 Moodle Cohort

    Posted 11-15-2022 20:26
    Edited by Nadine Forsyth 11-15-2022 20:26
    Hi there, my name is Nadine Forsyth. 
    I currently live in the Athabasca area, but lived most of my life in Edmonton.  

    I signed up for this course because I would like to learn more about Metis culture.  I am not indigenous and I want to learn how I can be supportive and respectful when working with indigenous communities.  I am a Child Care Licensing officer and I work with some programs on the Metis settlements and with programs that serve indigenous communities and I am eager to learn all that I can.  My grandchildren also have Metis status and I want to learn more to be able to have a more active role with them.

    I don't know that I have a specific question, I am just eager to learn all that I can.

    ------------------------------
    Nadine Forsyth


    Original Message:
    Sent: 10-24-2022 11:29
    From: Kimberley Fraser-Airhart
    Subject: November 2022 Moodle Cohort

    Taanishii hello everyone! Welcome to the

    RLI Métis Foundational Knowledge Themes Moodle Course
    November 2022 Moodle Cohort.

    We hope that you are excited to begin (or continue) your learning journey about the Métis Nation.
    Once the course begins on November 1, please login 
    to the MOODLE COURSE ensure you have proper access to everything.

    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 a collected as entries in a draw for a printed set of the Métis Foundational Knowledge Themes (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?
    What is one question you would like to have answered about the Métis through this course?

    Please complete this 2 minute survey so we can have a successful cohort together:
    Cohort Zoom Call Gatherings Survey

    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?

    ------------------------------
    Kimberley Fraser-Airhart
    Rupertsland Institute
    ------------------------------


  • 8.  RE: November 2022 Moodle Cohort

    Posted 11-15-2022 20:43
    Edited by Nadine Forsyth 11-15-2022 20:58
    Week 1 Reflections

    I am sorry that I am late responding to these questions, it took me a little while to get myself sorted out here.

    Trivia - nehiyawewin is the language that is missing from the list.

    I think as I learn more about Metis language I will learn more about the Metis culture and I will be better able to appreciate that culture.  I appreciate what was said about words not having an equivalent meaning in other languages.  At times, English seems especially limited in the words we have to express thoughts and feelings.  I can appreciate that hearing a story in the language is was meant to be told in would enhance the meaning.  And the teller explaining the concepts that we lack the words for would make it much more meaningful.




    ------------------------------
    Nadine Forsyth
    ------------------------------



  • 9.  RE: November 2022 Moodle Cohort

    Posted 11-17-2022 20:52
    Trivia 
    D

    I feel it is important to celebrate the distinct Metis culture in education because without recognizing that celebrating we will continue to create space for misconceptions and the fading of Metis culture. If we draw recognition and celebration we are more recognizable as a distinct indigenous group.

    ------------------------------
    Joel Gamache
    Livingstone Range School Division
    ------------------------------