TOPIC:
Analyse how and why the Government of Canada and the Church systematically attempted to assimilate Indigenous People since 1871 (Treaties, Laws, Residential Schools).
Points to remember:
- Don’t forget to have a proper thesis and blueprint, and organize your arguments.
- Minimum word count is 800 words.
- Double Spaced (use the button/function -- don’t hit enter at the end of every sentence), and make sure you add in page numbers. Add a cover page, too.
- Don’t forget the “so what?” factor / rationale / significance
- You MUST have a bibliography in Chicago Style with at least 5 sources. (If you do not have a bibliography you will get an automatic zero.)
- You must QUOTE the Indian Act in your essay.
- Course notes may not be used as part of your bibliography.
Where to Start your Research
- Other online resources:
- Primary resources:
- Sessional Papers, Volume 20, Dominion of Canada, Session 1911-12. Pages 388-91 provide a full report by Indian Agent Thomas Deasy. This is a primary resource discussing residential schools/assimilation.
- Indigenous Peoples of North America. Database of primary resources provided through Gale. Make sure you use keyword search, and indicate "Canada + topic".
- Department of Indian Affairs School Files. Provides access to the extensive Department of Indian Affairs correspondence records from the late nineteenth century to about 1950.
- To navigate this site, use the information listed here.
- To navigate this site, use the information listed here.
- What is Reconciliation - Murray Sinclair. Video that explains why we are discussing reconciliation, what it means and how our thinking was misinformed in the past. More information on this http://www.trc.ca/
- Secondary resources:
- They Came for the Children. Pages 9-16 explore why residential schools were imposed.
- Teaching Truth in the Classroom. Canadian youth address legacy of residential schools.
- Stolen Children: Truth and Reconciliation. National documentary available online through CBC Curio.
- How Did We Get Here? A concise account of the history of the relationship between Indigenous Peoples and Canada. Pages 7-9 & 19-24 address assimilation, and pages 14-16 address treaties.
- Primary resources:
- Print resources*: These resources contain both primary and secondary sources.
- Level 1 (slightly easier-to-read texts)
- Aboriginal Peoples: Building for the Future by Kevin Reed. Discusses First Contact, treaties, enfranchisement and residential schools.
- Aboriginal Treaties by Carolyn Gray. Discusses treaties established in the 1920s, & 1950s - 1970s.
- Speaking Our Truth by Monique Gray Smith. Discusses Indigenous life pre- and post-contact, and how families were affected.
- Level 2 (more challenging texts)
- First Nations 101 by Lynda Gray. Cover the BNA Act, Indian Act, reserves, Canada/US border divisions, residential schools, child welfare (incl. the 60s Scoop), politics and cultural appropriation.
- I Have Lived Here Since the World Began by Arthur J. Ray. Covers banning ceremonies and residential schools.
- Seven Fallen Feathers by Tanya Talaga. While investigating First Nation youth deaths in Thunder Bay, Indigenous journalist Talaga recounts the rise of residential schools as she visits those who have first-hand knowledge.
- Truth and Reconciliation in Canadian Schools by Pamela Rose Toulouse. Provides an overview of Canada's effects on Indigenous ways of life with concise explanations of treaties.
- Level 3 (more challenging texts)
- Aboriginal Peoples and Politics by Paul Tennant. Explains the effects of treaties, specific to British Columbia's Indigenous Peoples.
- Behind Closed Doors: Stories from the Kamloops Indian Residential School. Provides first-person accounts of residential school experiences.
- A National Crime by John S. Milloy. Discusses the Canadian government's involvement in the creation of residential schools, including their founding "vision".
- Level 1 (slightly easier-to-read texts)
* All scanned pages follow Access Canada's copyright rules for Fair Dealing.
Bibliography resources:
- OWL Purdue Online Writing Lab, “Chicago Manual of Style”
- NoodleTools videos: How to register and how to create a new project (see below).
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