Indigenizing
my Praxis
English resources
Good Minds:
https://goodminds.com/
I Lost my Talk by Rita Joe
Advice to a New Beekeeper by Susan Cormier
Walking in Two World by Wab Kinew
History Resources
Native Land Digital:
https://native-land.ca/
Facing History and Ourselves: https://www.facinghistory.org/about/locations/facing-history-ourselves-canada
The Witness Blanket:
https://witnessblanket.ca/
Things to know
Indigenous Social History
Factors such as:
Residential Schools
Assimilation
Treaties
Community experience with poverty,
substance abuse, and mental illness
Colonization
Intergenerational Trauma
Displacement of Inuit
60's Scoop
Understanding and evaluating
my own unconscious biases
Understand what it means to be an ally.
Recognize myself as a settler
Allyship is the active, consistent, and arduous practice of unlearning and re-evaluating, in which a person in a position of privilege and power seeks to operate in solidarity with a marginalized group. An ally disrupts oppressive spaces by educating others on the realities and histories of marginalized peoples. An ally humanizes and empathizes, letting go of assumptions. Most importantly, once an ally realizes or sees, they advocate for change while recognizing their own place and space. - "How to be an Ally" Toolkit by Lauren Winkler
Truth and Reconciliation in YOUR Classroom: https://www.edcan.ca/articles/truth-reconciliation-classroom/