R102217
This video outlines Saskatchewan's political history and how the legislature came to be built in Regina. Historical photographs, documents and interviews with politicians and historians enrich this documentary and shed light on what the legislative building represents in Saskatchewan's history and to its citizens. The video includes highlights of significant events that have taken place at Saskatchewan's legislative building.
Record posted/updated:
November 22, 2018
R054028
In 1989, the Canadian House of Commons sets the goal to eliminate poverty among Canada's children by the year 2000. In a country as rich and prosperous as Canada, has child poverty been eliminated? Mark Chatel travels the country to see what progress that has been made in the 20 years since that historic promise. Chatel discovers that over 700,000 children continue to live in poverty.
Parents, teachers, social workers, politicians and children offer insights on what it means to live in poverty on a daily basis. At times, Chatel's observations are discouraging, but he discovers that some solutions to end child poverty are not as complex as we believe.
Record posted/updated:
July 8, 2024
Book
Truth and Reconciliation
$17.95
Record posted/updated:
June 5, 2017
R101534
This resource is a coil bound booklet that explores the impact of the Indian Act on the Indigenous peoples of Canada. Through historical facts and stories of modern indigenous heroes, we see a Canada that has been shaped by tragedy and false information. This resource explores racism, both past and present, and what can be done to heal this country from the effects of colonization. It also shows how First Nations have fought for their treaties, for their rights and for their survival by highlighting the culturally significant events that have shaped and affirmed their sacred trust and legitimized their place in Canada.
Record posted/updated:
February 10, 2023
R072120
Canada's military mission in Afghanistan is scheduled to end in July 2011. Some Canadians want that mission to continue, while others wonder about its success. This video takes viewers on a six-day patrol with the soldiers of Delta Company and shows what kind of challenges and dangers they confront.
Record posted/updated:
June 5, 2017
R054719
This video program explores the issue of First Nations children who grow up without their fathers - the "blind spot." Two central themes in the program can lead to classroom discussion. First, the decimation of the buffalo stripped males of their role as providers and protectors. Moving First Nations people to reserves created a culture of dependency. The residential school system further eroded the First Nations family structure. The second theme is the lack of support or recognition by Canadian governments and the public on the issue of absent fathers. President Barack Obama is bringing the issue of fatherlessness to the forefront in the United States.
Filmed in North Central Regina, three men discuss fatherhood. Sixteen-year-old Tyson Kakaway is preparing for the birth of his first child. Only knowing his father through Facebook, Tyson vows he will do his best to be a father to his daughter. Andrew Kinniewisse is from the Yellowquill First Nation. Andrew is in the courts trying to prove that he can provide a stable home so that his two older children can return to live with him. Jeff Crowe spent 13 years in and out of jail; he now runs a parenting program at the Regina Correctional Centre.
Record posted/updated:
July 8, 2024
R072068
In March 2012, Stephen Harper's Conservatives table a new budget. It outlines plans for more than $5-billion of spending cuts, as well as one for phasing out the penny. This video examines details of the budget and looks at the reaction from the opposition and other Canadians.
Record posted/updated:
May 18, 2018
R072056
Canada's unemployment rate rises to 7.5 per cent, its highest level since April 2011. Canada's economy appears to be stalling, and the situation is particularly bleak in the country's two largest provinces, Quebec and Ontario. This video examines the situation and look at how two Ontario cities are trying to recover.
Record posted/updated:
May 18, 2018
R072081
As the swine flu continues to spread around the world, Canada's healthcare system is stepping up its pandemic preparations. The H1N1 virus first arrives in Canada in the spring and health authorities expect many more cases this winter.
Record posted/updated:
May 11, 2018
R072062
On March 25, 2011, Stephen Harper's minority Conservative government is defeated in the House of Commons. The Governor General dissolves Parliament and an election date is set for May 2nd. This video looks at the campaign, the issues and the final result.
Record posted/updated:
May 18, 2018
R072097
The fur trade played a large role in the early history of Canada. It opened up the country, created new communities and led to the further exploration of North America. Archaeologists have retrieved many artifacts from places like old trading posts.
Record posted/updated:
June 5, 2017
R072064
Allegations of illegal behaviour during the last federal election lead to a large-scale investigation. Thousands of Canadians received phone calls aimed at discouraging them from voting. This video discusses the political reaction and the search for those responsible.
Record posted/updated:
November 22, 2018
R072026
This video examines the struggles of two First Nations in the Carrier territory in British Columbia. In The Contagion of Colonisation, viewers will learn the historical context behind the First Nations groups circumstances. High Noon in Burns Lake focuses on the Ts'il Kaz Koh First Nation (Burns Lake Band). The Band has been in conflict with the village of Burns Lake over appropriated land. In 2000, the municipality shut off water and sewage services to the Reserve. Cheslatta Carrier Nation's story is told in Keeping Our Heads Above Water. In 1952, Alcan's hydroelectric project evicts people from their homeland. Today, the First Nation is struggling economically and culturally.
Record posted/updated:
November 22, 2018
R041841
One of the most important documents in Canadian history, The Charter of Rights and Freedoms was established in 1982. This documentary examines the history of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the struggle surrounding the ratification of the document, and the importance of the Charter of Rights and each of its guarantees: the fundamental freedoms, democratic rights, mobility rights, legal rights, equality rights, language rights. Interviews with government officials, educators, the legal community and recent immigrants are featured in the video.
Record posted/updated:
December 2, 2021
R072072
Canada is a country of immigrants. This video explores "Generation One," children of immigrants who were born in Canada but are still heavily influenced by the cultures and traditions of the countries where their parents once resided.
Record posted/updated:
May 18, 2018
R053155
Growing Up Among Strangers examines the duality of growing up in Canada's cultural mosaic. Several young Canadians from diverse cultural backgrounds talk about their struggles to balance two worlds: the traditional values of home and the westernized culture. The individual stories are combined with comments from Canadians of earlier generations who understand this dilemma. The combination of current anecdotes and memories shed light on the difficulties and benefits of living in two different cultures.
Record posted/updated:
November 22, 2018
R072216
This series examines how Canada became a nation. It begins with first contact between First Nations people and European settlers, and continues to modern, 21st-century Canada. Each book in the series presents a comprehensive overview of the issues and people that shaped Canada's history.
Each book contains illustrations, a glossary, a timeline of events and an index. The first book in the series fully supports the Grade 9 curriculum.
Please see the related resources below.
Record posted/updated:
July 8, 2024
R041515
This book describes the organization and operation of our parliamentary system. Following an introduction to the principal features of Canada's government, the book discusses the constitution and the roles of the various elected and appointed officials in the House of Commons and the Senate. The electoral process is described as well as the procedure on how a bill becomes law.
Included are a table of contents, a glossary, black-and-white photographs of the governors general, the prime ministers and the speakers of the House of Commons.
Record posted/updated:
January 16, 2025
R050627
Canada is a multicultural country where people of many races and backgrounds live in harmony together. Most of us are proud of our diversity, and like to think we live in a country where prejudice is not a problem. This video examines how one racist incident shocks a community. It asks pollsters and ordinary Canadians whether we should be doing more to fight intolerance.
Record posted/updated:
October 19, 2018
R045450
This program describes how the shift in family dynamics, with persuasive powers shifting from parent to child, creates a marketer's dream. In today's market, children have a say in how $700 billion is spent each year, making them a powerful consumer group. Big business wants children's attention, money and influence. Children are bombarded with well-researched advertising campaigns for children's products. Companies who market adult products, such as cars and vacations, also enlist children to persuade their parents to buy the "right" brand.
Record posted/updated:
December 5, 2018
R072089
It's been just over a year since Canada was hit by the effects of a global recession. More than 350,000 people lost their jobs. Now there are some faint signs of recovery, but is the recession really over?
Record posted/updated:
May 11, 2018
R019727
He was born in the war ravaged African country of Somalia and grew up on the streets of Toronto. Now K'naan is a global singing sensation and his song, Wavin' Flag, is the official song of the 2010 world soccer championship in South Africa. This interview with K'naan explores how his turbulent life has influenced his music and his message.
Record posted/updated:
May 8, 2018
R029081
The programs in this series tell the stories of Canadians from diverse backgrounds.
Record posted/updated:
January 3, 2022
R071474
In this collection of videos, men and women share their personal and often painful accounts of their experiences of residential school and its legacy.
Website
Truth and Reconciliation
Free
Record posted/updated:
June 5, 2017
R072145
Life Givers: Honouring Our Elders and Children is a film by Janine Windolph that testifies to the need to grieve and to honour the memory of loved ones.
Record posted/updated:
November 22, 2018
R040721
This weekly, five-minute video series highlights little-known, compelling and sometimes quirky stories from Saskatchewan's past. All stories were filmed on location and often feature people who had some personal or special connection to the event.
Please see the related resources below.
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Record posted/updated:
January 22, 2019
R048891
This poster provides the truth about misconceptions of Canada's residential schools such as: "No one knew at the time about the conditions of residential schools" and "Aboriginal people asked for residential schools."
Document
Other
Truth and Reconciliation
Free
Record posted/updated:
June 5, 2017
R072147
O Mother, Where Art Thou? by filmmakers Paul John Swiderski takes stock of his adoptive family and the security and well-being that they have always provided for him. However, he begins to wonder about his biological family.
Record posted/updated:
November 22, 2018
R105478
Operation Calvados explores the meaning of service and remembrance through the story of the Regina Rifle Regiment. On June 6, 1944, soldiers from across Saskatchewan—representing farms, cities, towns, and Indigenous communities—landed on Juno Beach in the first wave of the D-Day invasion. Their actions played a vital role in the Allied victory, shaping both the outcome of the war and Saskatchewan’s identity. Eighty years later, the film follows a remarkable community effort to place a bronze statue near Juno Beach and see current members of the Regiment walk in the footsteps of their predecessors.
Through historical footage and interviews with veterans, active soldiers, and community members, this film invites students to see remembrance as more than a moment of reflection, but as an ongoing, shared responsibility.
Record posted/updated:
November 3, 2025
R046734
In March, opposition members of Parliament table an explosive motion in the House of Commons. They ask the Speaker of the House to rule that the Conservative government is violating parliamentary privilege, for withholding documents on the treatment of Afghan detainees. Could this trigger a constitutional crisis and a federal election?
Record posted/updated:
December 5, 2018
R046735
In late September, Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff announced that his party would no longer support Stephen Harper's Conservative government. That meant that the minority government could be defeated, unless the NDP or the Bloc Quebecois supported it.
Record posted/updated:
December 5, 2018
R072036
When Parliament returned after a winter break, the big question is "would there be a spring election?" The government and the opposition parties claim they did not want one. This video looks at some of the issues that could determine whether that election is called.
Record posted/updated:
December 5, 2018
R072083
On November 11th, many Canadians take a moment to remember the soldiers who died fighting for Canada. The main ceremony takes place at the National War Memorial in Ottawa, but many other ceremonies are held across the country.
Record posted/updated:
May 11, 2018
R072061
Research in Motion (RIM) is one of Canada's most successful high-tech companies. It developed the Blackberry smartphone, but the company has been losing ground to the competition. This video examines RIM's troubles and the future of the company.
Record posted/updated:
May 18, 2018
R072118
For more than a hundred years many First Nations children were taken away from their families, and forced to attend residential schools. In 2008, the Canadian government apologizes for the suffering and the abuse many experienced. This video explores the work of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and what it hopes to accomplish.
Video
Truth and Reconciliation
Free
Record posted/updated:
November 22, 2018
R072092
In November, a Canadian diplomat triggers a political firestorm on Parliament Hill. Richard Colvin tells a committee that Canadian troops have been handing over prisoners to Afghan authorities, even though the government knew they might be tortured. The government denies it, refuses to hand over the documentation and then suspends Parliament.
Record posted/updated:
May 11, 2018
R042681
Bill Waiser takes readers on a journey through Saskatchewan's first 100 years as a province. From its early beginnings as the Northwest Territories, Saskatchewan's strength has always been the people who reside in the province. Based on stories and events, Waiser tells us of the foresight, hard work and determination that made the province a reality.
This book was nominated for two Saskatchewan Book Awards in 2005.
Record posted/updated:
July 8, 2024
R072090
After decades of waiting, Aboriginal Canadians receive a formal apology from the federal government on June 11, 2008. This event in Canadian history recognizes the loss of culture caused by the church-run residential schools that thousands of Aboriginal children were forced to attend. It also acknowledges the physical and sexual abuse that many suffered in those institutions. Stolen Children explores the impact of residential schools on former students and their children and grandchildren. Survivors share their experiences and discuss the legacy of fear, abuse and suicide being passed down from generation to generation. The words of successive Canadian politicians and bureaucrats are revealed against a backdrop of archival footage, a reminder of the policies and convictions that drove the government of the day to seek "a final solution to the Indian problem." The video also includes the original broadcast of Prime Minister Stephen Harper's apology, the apology of Stéphane Dion, Leader of the Official Opposition, and reaction from the Aboriginal community and Aboriginal leaders.
Video
Truth and Reconciliation
Free
Record posted/updated:
May 11, 2018
R050038
This video examines the plight of missing women in Canada. In 2004, Amnesty International charged Canada with human rights violations in its treament of Indigenous women who been murdered or have gone missing in violent circumstances in the past 20 years. Daleen Bosse Muskego and Amber Redman are two Saskatchewan women that are profiled in the program. Viewers will feel the frustration and pain of the families as they deal with police departments, racism and indifference. The Robert Pickton case, the sex trade murders in Edmonton, and the Highway of Tears in Prince George are a few of the incidents of missing women that are also included in the program.
Record posted/updated:
November 23, 2021
R051443
Tar Sands: Canada for Sale captures the intersecting storyline of a remarkable cast of characters eager to cash in on the oil boom in Fort McMurray, Alberta. Washington lobbyists, pipefitters from Newfoundland, Chinese investors and Norwegian industrialists descend on tar-soaked Fort McMurray, a modern-day Eldorado, where rents are skyrocketing and cocaine abuse is four times the provincial average. Up for grabs - a stake in the $100 billion energy bonanza and Canada's economic sovereignty. this documentary tracks the growth of the world's largest reserve of 'unconventional' oil.
This Florida-sized 'environmental sacrifice zone' has become Canada's contribution to the U.S. energy security in the post-9/11 world. Yet, for many, the tar sands are a global warming disaster. As Fort McMurray bursts at the seams, children from Thunder Bay to Cape Breton are made tar-sands orphans by their migrant-worker parents. Canada's petrodollar breaks the back of the manufacturing economy in the East. Cancer rates skyrocket downstream of Fort McMurray while Rocky Mountain glaciers melt and disappear. And all the while, Alberta crude goes south to U.S. markets while Eastern Canada pays ever more for insecure Middle East oil. In an isolated region of the north, Canada's future is being carved out of the forest at the breakneck pace. "Tar Sands: Canada for Sale" questions how much Canada is willing to sacrifice for a stake in this century's greatest energy bonanza.
Record posted/updated:
July 8, 2024
R035464
The Office of the Treaty Commissioner (OTC) has developed a treaty information kit for use in Saskatchewan schools. The kit features educational resource materials that include curriculum supplements, videos and books about the history of treaties. The individual pieces show both First Nations and European perspectives about the treaty relationship. Information on treaty topics range from the precontact history of First Nations people, first contact issues, the relevance of the past to the contemporary situation and what is happening within the present treaty relationship.
The OTC provides inservice training for teachers in use of the kit.
The kit was provided to every school in the province.
Record posted/updated:
July 8, 2024
R072045
It's been 30 years since Terry Fox dies in a British Columbia hospital, one month short of his 23rd birthday and nine months after he was forced to give up his cross-Canada run to raise money for cancer research. This video looks at his legendary run and his enduring legacy.
Record posted/updated:
May 18, 2018
R072048
For over a year a debt crisis in the European community, or eurozone, is affecting the stability of the world's economic system. In recent months the crisis has reached critical levels and is threatening to plunge the Canadian economy into another recession. This video examines the problem and what is being done to try to overcome the crisis.
Record posted/updated:
May 18, 2018
R072152
The Canadian Arctic is one of the world's last great wilderness regions and is facing pressures concerning natural gas exploration. The Mackenzie Valley Pipeline, the largest construction project in Canada in more than a century, will bring natural gas from the Far North to Alberta's Tar Sands for oil extraction and refining. David Suzuki re-examines the Berger inquiry of the 1960s. Suzuki accompanies Tom Berger as they confront issues of environmental impact, climate change and ecological change.
Record posted/updated:
May 9, 2018
R072060
The U.S. government delays approval of a pipeline to transport oil from Alberta to refineries in Texas. The Canadian government responds by saying it will speed up approval of another pipeline to carry the oil over the Rocky Mountains to British Columbia. This video looks at why the government wants the pipelines built and why so many are determined to stop them.
Record posted/updated:
May 15, 2018
R051836
Still controversial after 40 years, this video program examines the Canadian commercial seal hunt. The seal hunt has been the cause for many celebrities and animal rights groups. The seal hunt cause generates thousands of dollars in donations for animal rights groups. Wealthy celebrities do not want to hear that whitecoats have not been hunted in over ten years or the factors that affect seals, such as loss of ice. It is an opportunity for animal rights groups to exploit celebrity for profit. On the other side of the controversy are the seal hunters. The seal hunt is one of the most highly regulated hunts in the world. Hunting quotas are in place, a ban on whitecoats has existed for over 20 years and seal populations are monitored. The potential of using the whole seal as a natural resource is discussed.
Record posted/updated:
April 22, 2018
R072043
On August 22, 2011, Jack Layton dies of cancer at his home in Toronto. His death shocks many Canadians and leaves the New Democratic Party aimless just three months after becoming the Official Opposition. This video looks at the life and death of Jack Layton and what his death could mean for his party and the country.
Record posted/updated:
May 18, 2018
R046492
This book about Métis life in Canada provides a thorough examination of the people, culture and historical events. The resource highlights the strengths of the Métis and of the challenges they have faced.
Record posted/updated:
February 10, 2023
R072065
In the last election the New Democratic Party became the official opposition in Parliament. Three months later its leader, Jack Layton, dies of cancer and a race begins to succeed him. This video looks at that race and how Thomas Mulcair became the NDP's new leader.
Record posted/updated:
November 22, 2018
R072121
The American government is considering whether to allow construction of a giant pipeline that would pump more Canadian oil into the United States. The oil comes from Alberta's oil sands, and many environmentalists say the pipeline should not be built. This video looks at both viewpoints.
Record posted/updated:
May 11, 2018
R072094
On Christmas Day 2009, a Nigerian man allegedly tries to blow up an airliner as it prepares to land in Detroit. The man was subdued by other passengers before he could set off explosive material sewn into his underwear. The incident triggered a security scare at airports all over the world.
Record posted/updated:
May 11, 2018
R072143
In The Power of a Horse, filmmaker Cory Generoux deals with the scars that racism left on his life - both as its recipient and perpetrator.
Record posted/updated:
November 22, 2018
R072052
A group called Occupy Wall Street begins a series of demonstrations in New York City. The movement starts as a public protest against social and economic inequality and what the protestors call corporate greed. The movement spreads to several Canadian cities.
Record posted/updated:
May 18, 2018
R072093
Canada plays host to the world when the Winter Olympics open in Vancouver. During the Games, the spotlight will be on the athletes. But it has taken years of work by thousands of Canadians to prepare for this event.
Record posted/updated:
November 22, 2018
R072037
A gunman opens fire at a small political rally in Tucson, Arizona. Six people are killed and 14 others are injured, including congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. Shot in the head, Giffords survives and the shooting triggers a political debate in the United States.
Record posted/updated:
December 5, 2018
R072053
Every year Canada loses thousands of acres of farmland by farmers giving up farming or selling their land to developers. A group of Ontario farmers thought they were selling their land to a large company so it could grow potatoes, only to discover it was to be turned into a quarry.
Record posted/updated:
May 18, 2018
R072202
Lévesque examines the questions "What is historical thinking?" and "How do educators teach it?" Educators are provided the opportunity to reflect on their practice through some of the benchmarks for historical thinking, what students ought to learn and how to become more critical historical thinkers.
Some of the topics include the nature of history and historical thinking, how to make sense of the raw materials of the past and how to understand predecessors who had different moral frameworks.
The book includes a table of contents, a bibliography and an index.
Record posted/updated:
July 8, 2024
R072034
This video examines the controversy over the release by Wikileaks of hundreds of classified U.S. documents, as well as the role of its founder and editor-in-chief, Julian Assange.
Record posted/updated:
December 5, 2018
R072149
In ati-wîhcasin (It's Getting Easier) filmmaker Tessa Desnomie celebrates the life and times of her grandmother, Jane Merasty. Born and raised on the trapline, this Woodlands Cree woman witness's significant changes over her 80 years.
Record posted/updated:
November 22, 2018