Métis Foundational Knowledge Themes Moodle Cohorts

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December 2023 Cohort

  • 1.  December 2023 Cohort

    Posted 11-28-2023 09:24
    Edited by RCTL Education Team 12-31-2023 23:10

    RLI Métis Foundational Knowledge Themes Moodle Course
    December 2023 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: December 2023 Cohort

    Posted 12-04-2023 15:53

    Hi! My name is Amanda Yaworski and I'm an Outreach teacher in Hinton AB. I wanted to deepen my knowledge of Metis culture to support weaving traditional knowledge into my teaching practice. I'm a lifelong learner and jumped at this opportunity. 

    Week 1 Trivia

    I did not know the fourth language but I did look in the vocab list of the Moodle course and found Nehiyawewin (say: neh-hee-yah-way-win), Cree Language. I would think this is the missing traditional language. 

    Week 1 Reflection

    Language allows for a common ground for all speakers to engage with, connect with, and build upon their interactions together. Language is essential to identity and culture.  I hope to understand more direct words/phrases of the languages traditionally spoken by Metis to better weave those ways of knowing into my teaching. 



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    Amanda Yaworski
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  • 3.  RE: December 2023 Cohort

    Posted 12-07-2023 15:25

    Hi there! My name is Jessie Fiddler.  I'm a social worker and have worked in child protection for 23 years.  I am always excited to learn about my culture any chance I get so I thought this course would be a great way for further learning! 

    Week 1 Trivia - Cree is missing! 

    Week 1 Reflection - The biggest take away regarding our language is that it really depended which territory you were from and who your family were/are.  For example there are different dialects of michif so this speaks to your identity- where you come from and the pieces of that culture that can be different from the other dialects.  What also struck me is that michif is not well known and the majority of metis people do not know their language.  To me this speaks to us often being called the forgotten people and it speaks to me how our language is forgotten. However that being said there is also the revitalization of our language just like this course is reviving our distinct traditions and culture 



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    Jessie Fiddler
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  • 4.  RE: December 2023 Cohort

    Posted 12-11-2023 19:01

    Week 2 - I feel like all of the above is the correct answer.

    Week 2 Reflection - I think it would be important to celebrate distinct Metis culture in an educational community because a lot of metis people are newly learning who they are.  I have heard so many stories of metis people being in their 20's or 30's and finding out they are metis.   Our traditions and culture were hidden by a lot of families and due to many families trying to assimilate the cultures and traditions hid, almost becoming extinct in some families.  We are in a new season of truth and reconciliation and can now stand proud in who we are and seek out our knowledge keepers who remember the traditions and values we had.  



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    Jessie Fiddler
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  • 5.  RE: December 2023 Cohort

    Posted 12-13-2023 08:57

    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

    The answer is all of them are correct  - answer d.

    "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? This would be important as it will help Metis students develop pride and ownership of their cultural roots. Identity is important to growth and with the kinship, community and networking being the core values of Metis culture this could  also encourage other  students to connect to their own culture. It would also celebrate and highlight the rich connected distinct culture of Metis peoples'. By speaking of the connection to others and the land and language there is a transformation and understanding that occurs with all listening. It would help to revitalize all aspects of Metis culture. 



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    rhonda robinson
    Spirit Creative Lrd and McMuuray Metis
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  • 6.  RE: December 2023 Cohort

    Posted 12-15-2023 09:35

    Week 2 Trivia and Week 2 Reflection

    Good morning, and greetings to the December cohort Rhonda and Jessie!

    I'm going with d) all the choices are correct. As core Metis values, it makes sense to me that many traditions include kinship, community, and networking as a foundation. 

    Dr. Anne Anderson showcases how important cultural heritage is to a person's identity. One simply cannot know who they are without knowing where they came from, and hence not possess pride or dignity for their people. Reading my cohort's responses, I see the importance of celebrating distinct Metis culture in educational communities because it allows people a chance to reconnect with what was lost because of historic systems of oppression. Truth and Reconciliation has to begin with truth, and as Rhonda and Jessie stated many people are learning more of their truth today. As a teacher, I'm taking this course to support weaving more traditional ways of knowing into curriculum and holding space for the celebration of distinct Metis culture with my students. 



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    Amanda Yaworski
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  • 7.  RE: December 2023 Cohort

    Posted 12-17-2023 22:44

    Week 1: 

    Hi, my name is Tammy Johnston.  I apologize for starting this post so late.  I was travelling for work the first week and then there were a few deaths in the indigenous community in Calgary.  I was attending vigils and drumming and singing with AIM for the families.  

    I am a teacher with over 30 years of experience in education and I currently present on indigenous issues and incorporating indigenous ways of knowing for the ARPDC and the Edmonton Regional Learning Consortium online and in--person.  I also decolonize and indigenize curriculum for various school divisions and post-secondary institutions in Alberta.  I am Red River Metis from Selkirk, Manitoba.  This course will help me to better understand the specific needs and issues of Albertan Metis citizens.  

    The fourth language missing is Cree for the trivia.  My grandfather, who was Metis and raised me, spoke Cree, but did not teach us.  I am currently entering my fourth session of Cree classes at Miskanawah in Calgary in January.  I have basic French from Manitoba as well, so one day I hope to also learn Michif to connect with other parts of my Metis culture.  Learning Cree has had a profound impact on me personally and professionally.  I practice Cree spirituality and attend ceremonies, including sweats, regularly.  Being able to pray and understand more of what is being said in Cree during ceremonies has connected me more deeply to my culture.  Hearing the language and understanding the deep connection to the land and spiritual practices has changed my life.  My pride in my culture has increased as I see how rich it truly is.  

    Week 2:

    Trivia answer:  All of those core values are evident in celebrations, sharing extra wild game and traditional house design.  Everything that we have done as Metis people has been practical,  beautiful through artwork and design, and the sharing of meals with friends, family and guests.

    Knowing who I am and where I come from on all sides of my family is important, but knowing my Metis lineage and history connects to who I am as an indigenous Canadian.  My aunt has always told me that we are the true Canadians who bridge the gap between our First Nations cousins and the Europeans.  We are post-contact, precolonial people who understand both worlds and walk in both.  We can help to bring reconciliation through this understanding.  My Metis family is a mix of Scottish, English, French, Cree and Ojibway and I am a product of all of those grandmothers and grandfathers.  



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    Tammy Johnston
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  • 8.  RE: December 2023 Cohort

    Posted 12-18-2023 22:56

    Tansii Tammy 

    and welcome, I am too taking the Cree class with  Miskanawah  in calgary, I currently am online but I am hoping to register for online classes in April as well , hopefully we come across each others paths there and we can trade notes!



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    Hailey Lambert
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  • 9.  RE: December 2023 Cohort

    Posted 12-28-2023 00:01

    Week 3:  

    Trivia:  November 16th is the day that Louis Riel was executed by the Canadian government on the false charge of treason.

    The Metis Ways of Being of wahkohtowin and otipemisiwak are important for learners to understand because they need to understand the root of Metis beliefs and kinship.  Our interconnectedness and belief in our freedom is core to who we are as a people.  We work together to protect this freedom and our rights as a people.  The 2 concepts may seem at odds, but these actually work together seamlessly.  We are both connected to each other and everything, but maintain our right to be free as a people.



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    Tammy Johnston
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  • 10.  RE: December 2023 Cohort

    Posted 12-28-2023 01:41

    Week 4:

    Trivia: 1 b, 2 a

    Reflection:

    The Metis live out otipemisiwak by constantly fighting for and maintaining their rights in Canada.  Now we have been able to regain our ability to show our way of life in public again and display our culture to the rest of Canada.  The increase in using the Michif and Cree languages, along with our Metis ways of being shows that we are still a people with a strong and independent streak.  We are not going anywhere.



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    Tammy Johnston
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  • 11.  RE: December 2023 Cohort

    Posted 01-02-2024 08:08

    WEEK 3 REFLECTION:

    WEEK 3 TRIVIA:

    Why do people commemorate Louis Riel on November 16th? - This is the day he was executed for high treason. 

    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? 

    No this is not a narrative I have encounter before this course. This way would reinforce a commitment to reconciliation  and respecting Metis ways of being and knowing. It would allow for "systems" of change and bring back strong Metis Kinship ways.  It would  help learners to be proud and respect the Metis way of doing things. 



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    rhonda robinson
    Spirit Creative Lrd and McMuuray Metis
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  • 12.  RE: December 2023 Cohort

    Posted 01-02-2024 08:13

    WEEK 4 TRIVIA:

    Match each term to the correct definition.

    Terms:

    1) Wahkohtowin -

    2) Otipemisiwak - A

    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? This happens through an insurgence of reclaiming proud Metis heritage and recognition as some of Canadas first peoples.  Metis people know that a self governed way is the way to reconcile with the past and honor those who have fought over the decades for our right's. They know that this is a way to heal a nation of people wholistically. Kinship is very important and you can not know where you are going if you do not know where you have been . 



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    rhonda robinson
    Spirit Creative Lrd and McMuuray Metis
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