The citizen self and aboriginal “other” : notions of citizenship and aboriginality in British Columbian social studies education, 1945-present

Social studies education in British Columbia from the 1940s until present has upheld active citizenship as a central objective of the program. While citizenship is never clearly defined, generally it has been assumed that through a process of self-actualization students come to know their rights and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Birkeland, Nicole (Author), Shelvey, Bruce (Thesis supervisor), Etherington, Matthew (Second reader), Barman, Jean (External examiner), Trinity Western University SGS (Degree granting institution)
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Trinity Western University 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arcabc.ca/islandora/object/twu%3A145
_version_ 1821514613315862528
author2 Birkeland, Nicole (Author)
Shelvey, Bruce (Thesis supervisor)
Etherington, Matthew (Second reader)
Barman, Jean (External examiner)
Trinity Western University SGS (Degree granting institution)
collection Arca (BC's Digital Treasures)
description Social studies education in British Columbia from the 1940s until present has upheld active citizenship as a central objective of the program. While citizenship is never clearly defined, generally it has been assumed that through a process of self-actualization students come to know their rights and responsibilities as Canadian citizens. Problematically, these notions of citizenship have shaped the narration of Aboriginality within social studies education. Aboriginality has been represented in learning outcomes and resources materials within a progressive Canadian metanarrative, creating inaccurate and uninformed characterizations of Aboriginal peoples. Overall, social studies education has had a negative impact on the First Nations-Canadian relationship. However, social studies education could assist in developing more positive relationships. Engaging students in transformed historical study that fosters questioning, examines narrative choices, sees negotiation and interaction, recognizes and honours difference, and allows for dialogue, may foster more promising relationships in the future.
format Thesis
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
id ftarcabc:oai:arcabc.ca:twu_145
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftarcabc
op_relation https://arcabc.ca/islandora/object/twu%3A145
twu:145
uuid: 22f400ae-587e-4011-bbb4-937e03d07394
op_rights author
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
publishDate 2013
publisher Trinity Western University
record_format openpolar
spelling ftarcabc:oai:arcabc.ca:twu_145 2025-01-16T21:56:13+00:00 The citizen self and aboriginal “other” : notions of citizenship and aboriginality in British Columbian social studies education, 1945-present Birkeland, Nicole (Author) Shelvey, Bruce (Thesis supervisor) Etherington, Matthew (Second reader) Barman, Jean (External examiner) Trinity Western University SGS (Degree granting institution) 2013 electronic https://arcabc.ca/islandora/object/twu%3A145 eng eng Trinity Western University https://arcabc.ca/islandora/object/twu%3A145 twu:145 uuid: 22f400ae-587e-4011-bbb4-937e03d07394 author http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ Indians of North America -- Education -- British Columbia Social sciences -- Study and teaching -- British Columbia Native peoples -- Study and teaching -- British Columbia Citizenship Text thesis 2013 ftarcabc 2023-10-01T18:16:43Z Social studies education in British Columbia from the 1940s until present has upheld active citizenship as a central objective of the program. While citizenship is never clearly defined, generally it has been assumed that through a process of self-actualization students come to know their rights and responsibilities as Canadian citizens. Problematically, these notions of citizenship have shaped the narration of Aboriginality within social studies education. Aboriginality has been represented in learning outcomes and resources materials within a progressive Canadian metanarrative, creating inaccurate and uninformed characterizations of Aboriginal peoples. Overall, social studies education has had a negative impact on the First Nations-Canadian relationship. However, social studies education could assist in developing more positive relationships. Engaging students in transformed historical study that fosters questioning, examines narrative choices, sees negotiation and interaction, recognizes and honours difference, and allows for dialogue, may foster more promising relationships in the future. Thesis First Nations Arca (BC's Digital Treasures)
spellingShingle Indians of North America -- Education -- British Columbia
Social sciences -- Study and teaching -- British Columbia
Native peoples -- Study and teaching -- British Columbia
Citizenship
The citizen self and aboriginal “other” : notions of citizenship and aboriginality in British Columbian social studies education, 1945-present
title The citizen self and aboriginal “other” : notions of citizenship and aboriginality in British Columbian social studies education, 1945-present
title_full The citizen self and aboriginal “other” : notions of citizenship and aboriginality in British Columbian social studies education, 1945-present
title_fullStr The citizen self and aboriginal “other” : notions of citizenship and aboriginality in British Columbian social studies education, 1945-present
title_full_unstemmed The citizen self and aboriginal “other” : notions of citizenship and aboriginality in British Columbian social studies education, 1945-present
title_short The citizen self and aboriginal “other” : notions of citizenship and aboriginality in British Columbian social studies education, 1945-present
title_sort citizen self and aboriginal “other” : notions of citizenship and aboriginality in british columbian social studies education, 1945-present
topic Indians of North America -- Education -- British Columbia
Social sciences -- Study and teaching -- British Columbia
Native peoples -- Study and teaching -- British Columbia
Citizenship
topic_facet Indians of North America -- Education -- British Columbia
Social sciences -- Study and teaching -- British Columbia
Native peoples -- Study and teaching -- British Columbia
Citizenship
url https://arcabc.ca/islandora/object/twu%3A145