Traités AutochtoneProgrammes d'études de SaskatchewanProgrammes
d'études de Saskatchewan disponible seulement en anglais. Social
Studies 10 History 10 History
30 Grade 10 Objectives (Social Studies 10) Core
Concept: Economic Decision Making - Know that beliefs and values
of a society will affect its social and political organization.
Related
Content - Economic Development in Saskatchewan: During the
19th century, the Federal government made some fundamental decisions about the
economy of the prairies and the future of the people there.
- Look
at government documents concerning future of Rupert's Land and the peoples there.
Grade
10 Objectives (History 10) Objectives Unit 1: Political
Decision Making Core Concept: Social Organizations - Know
that humans establish various kinds of organizations as a means of systematically
meeting their needs and wants.
- Know that any group or organization
must decide on some means of decision making that will allow it to function effectively.
- Know that groups or organizations must have some way of resolving
differences and making and enforcing conclusions so that a collective course of
action can be carried out.
Related Content
- World view and the decision making process: the Aboriginal and European world
views.
Unit 4: Imperialism Core Concept: Acculturation Related Content - The use of national
power to protect national self interest.
- Imperialism in North
America in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Grade
12 Objectives (History 30) Unit 1: Relationships: People
and Paradigms Foundational Objective 1 Know that a worldview
is a comprehensive viewpoint that explains the nature of reality, creates expectations,
and provides meaning and purpose for people's lives. Core Concept:
Paradigms - Know that the Europeans operated with a set of
paradigms, concerning sovereignty, property, and equality of peoples and societies,
that differed greatly from the paradigms of the First Nations.
- Know
that these paradigms influenced the perceptions and actions of both individuals
and groups within European and First Nations societies.
Foundational
Objective 2 Know that every society will evolve assumptions and practices
that surround the key societal relationship between the peoples and the "land". Core
Concepts: Land - Know that First Nations assumptions about
ownership of the land did not mirror those held by the colonizing Europeans.
- Know that the Europeans viewed North America as being a vast reservoir
of resources to be utilized by those willing to extend the effort and expend the
costs of acquiring those resources.
Foundational Objective
3 Know that within every society, there will exist a contest among
groups to gain influence over the societal decision-making processes. Core
Concepts: Decision Making - Know that the colonizing powers
were determined to institute their decision-making paradigm on their colonies
in North America.
- Know that colonial decision making was the
prerogative of the governing European power rather than either the residents of
the colonies or the First Nations.
Foundational Objective
4 Know that the well-being of every society will be influenced by
sustained contact with other societies. Core Concepts: Acculturation Unit 2: The Nineteenth
Century: The Road to Democracy Foundational Objective 1 Know
that within societies, there exists a competition among interest groups for influence
over the society's decision-making processes, and that those groups will vary
in terms of their ability to influence those processes. Core Concept:
Interest Group Core
Concept: Federalism -
Know that the Canadian federal system
of government is one in which political decision making is constitutionally allocated
to either the national government or to provincial governments. -
Know that federalism balances the desire for overall unity with a desire to
retain local or regional autonomy. -
Know that establishment
of provincial governments reflected the concern of the both the francophone population
of Quebec, and the Maritime Provinces, that a single national government would
be dominated by Central Canada and would not represent the interests and well-being
of other regions and populations of the nation. Core Concept:
Decision Making -
Know that the regions of Canada have
varying degrees of political and economic influence over national decision making.
-
Know that the federal government did not involve the Aboriginal
population and other residents of Rupert's Land in determining their opinions
and needs. Core Concept: Métis
- Know that Canadian acquisition of the North West had consequences for the
Métis people of that region.
- Know that large-scale migration
of Euro-Canadian settlers to the North West was seen by the Métis as a
threat to their traditional economy and cultural identity.
- Know
that the Métis sought, through negotiations, recognition and protection
of their rights and landholdings.
- Know that provisions of the
Métis Bill of Rights included:
-
that
the territories must have the right to enter Canada's Confederation as a province;
-
that the people would have the right to send four members of
Parliament to Ottawa; -
that the Métis had the right
to control their own local affairs; -
that the Métis
wanted French and English languages to be equal in the schools and law courts;
and, -
that the Métis wanted to keep their customs and
their Métis way of life. - Know that the policies
and actions of the Canadian government towards the Métis had a negative
impact on the unity of the nation.
Core Concept: First
Nations -
Know that one of the goals of the Canadian government
was to implement policies that would lead to assimilation of the First Nations
who resided in the former Rupert's Land. -
Know that the Canadian
government planned to relocate the First Nation peoples to reserves and thereby
make the land available for European settlers to establish an agricultural-based
economy. Core Concept: Treaties
-
Know that the Canadian government planned to acquire the lands of the
Canadian West by negotiating treaties with the First Nations and that those treaties
extinguished First Nations' land claims. -
Know that the First
Nations and the Canadian government held differing assumptions concerning the
terms and meaning of the treaties. Core Concept: Indian
Act Foundational
Objective 3 Know that the history of the Canadian peoples has been
greatly influenced by external forces and events. Core Concept:
External Influence Related Content The Search for Economic Well-being:
The National Policy Unit 5: Challenges and Opportunities
Foundational Objective 1 Know that within the Canadian community,
seeking of new relationships that satisfy the needs of an increasingly diverse
society is proving to be a difficult process. Core Concept: Assimilation
- Know that through agencies such as the Department of Indian Affairs, the federal
government established the goals and priorities of policies directed at Aboriginal
people.
- Know that the assimilation of Aboriginal peoples remained
the desired option of government.
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