
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
This book was nominated for two Saskatchewan Book Awards in 2005.
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.
The OTC provides inservice training for teachers in use of the kit.
The kit was provided to every school in the province.
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.
and grades. Suggested curriculum outcomes are identified and, if applicable, supporting indicators
are noted.
The purpose of the presentation is to describe strategies teachers can use to approach content that may be perceived as sensitive in their community in order to:
- ensure the learning environment is safe for respectful dialogue;
- teach students how to think critically about any topic with an open mind; and,
- meet curricular outcomes.
Saskatchewan context, differentiation is addressed through the Adaptive Dimension which enables all teachers to respond to student diversity, including their strengths and needs, interests, backgrounds, life experiences and motivations.