Teacher Resources

As part of their three-week Community Field Experience (CFE), UBC Secondary and Elementary & Middle Years teacher candidates created educational resources based on Pacific Canada migration stories. See below for their work. Additionally, see different communities’ teacher resources.

  • Scroll down for lesson plans, activities & resources.

  • Scroll down for lesson plans, activities & resources.

  • Scroll down for lesson plans, activities & resources.

  • Scroll down for videos, testimonies, and literature.

  • Rianna created educational resources based on her family's history and migration story. Her educational resource review document also includes educational resources in connection to her family history and their identities as Indo-Fijian Canadians.

  • Scroll down for lesson plans, activities & resources.

  • Mahima created a lesson plan and educational resources focusing on thematic elements of a migration story from PCHC Archives. Tariq Malik’s Migration Story: Decolonizing the Mind and Reclaiming the Spirit by Patara McKeen is used as a resource in conjunction with When Stars are Scattered by Victoria Jamieson and Omar Mohamed.

Black Migration Stories & Histories

Lesson Plans, Activities & Resources

BC Black History & Awareness Society

Resources and Digital Museum

Black Strathcona

Includes 10 Teaching Videos from the early 1900s to the late 1960s, the East Side neighborhood of Strathcona was home to Vancouver's first and only black community.

 

Secret Vancouver: Return to Hogan's Alley - Storyhive 

Discover how this hotbed of historic jazz was nearly forgotten by time and erased by urban renewal.

Historica Canada: Canada History Week 2019: Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters

Vancouver Heritage Foundation: Places that Matter - Hogan's Alley

Hogan's Alley Society

A Guide to Online Resources for Teaching & Learning about Black History in Canada

Underground Railway: The William Sill Story  

The Canadian Encyclopedia: The Black History in Canada Collection– Timelines, Key People & Places, Education Guides and Heritage Minutes   

Chinese Migration Stories & Histories

Canada Pacific Personal Migration Videos


Ada Con’s Migration Story

Pat Parungao’s Migration Story

May Q Wong’s Migration Story

  

Literature

An Ocean Apart: The Gold Mountain Diary of Chin Mei-Ling by Gillian Chan 2004 Grades 5-7 /Ages  8-12

Mei-ling lives with her father in Vancouver, but her mother and baby brother are still in China. Mei-ling works after school, and her father holds down several jobs, in a frantic effort to come up with the head tax that will allow her mother and brother to come to Canada. They must have that money before the Exclusion Act bars any more Chinese from immigrating. Mei-ling cannot stop thinking about what will happen if they are unable to come up with the money to reunite their family.


The Chinese Violin by Madeleine Thien Illustrated by Joe Chang 2001 Grades 3-5 / Ages 5-8 

A moving and poignant account about immigration, and how cherished objects, mementos and memories can ease the pain of homesickness. 

Learning to Fly by Paul Yee, 2008 Grades 5-12 / Ages 12 and up         

Jason is an outsider. A recent immigrant from China, he lives in a close-minded town with his mother and younger brother. Falling in with the wrong crowd, trying to fit in, Jason takes chances and ends up in trouble with the police. Holding on to his friendship with an Indigenous boy, also an outsider, Jason finds he needs to fight to belong and to find a new home

Me and Mr. Mah by Andrea Spalding (Divorce/ Chinese Canadian/ Memory Box)

The Diary of Dukesang Wong: A Voice from Gold Mountain edited by David Mcilwraith and translated by Wanda Joy Hoe.

Most of what is known about Chinese workers’ experiences building transcontinental railways throughout North America has been gathered from evidence produced by non-Chinese people. This book presents the extraordinary first person-account of Dukesang Wong, a Chinese worker who came to Gold Mountain to build the Canadian Pacific Railroad. Translated by his granddaughter Wanda Joy Hoe in the 1960s, Wong’s diary entries tell the story of gruelling labour, illness and starvation, and unrelenting racism.

Lesson Plans, Activities & Resources

Addressing Anti-Asian Racism: A Resource for Educators This is where Canadian Facing History and Ourselves teachers and community members meet to share reflections, scholarship and teaching practices that will inspire, challenge and improve teaching and student learning.


Chinatown, Existing 

Featuring Vancouver’s Chinatown as a living classroom, this three-part field trip includes a visit to the Chinese Canadian Museum exhibition gallery, the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden, and a mini walking tour of Chinatown. Designed to complement the BC provincial curriculum, Grade 9 – 10 students will explore the endurance of Vancouver Chinatown and the resilience of the Chinese Canadian community through stories of food, community, and activism.

Chinese Canadian Museum

Canadian Encyclopedia: Chinese Immigration Act

Learn about the Chinese Immigration Act of 1923, known also as the Chinese Exclusion Act. This Act banned the entry of virtually all Chinese immigrants for 24 years.

 

The Chinese Canadian Historical Society of BC

 

The Chinese Canadian Military Museum

 

The Chung Collection is housed in UBC’s Rare Books Collections 

On display and open to the public on weekdays, is a sampling of artifacts relating to CPR rail and ships, the early Chinese Canadian immigrant experience (including photographs, ship manifests, head tax records, opium smoking paraphernalia), and maps by the early explorers.


Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden

Located in Vancouver, it is the first full-scale classical Chinese Garden ever constructed outside of China.


Chinese Canadian Women, 1923-1967

Funded by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, the online exhibit entitled Chinese Canadian Women, 1923-1967: Inspiration - Innovation – Ingenuity, explores a compelling chapter of Canadian history through the experiences of Canadian women of Chinese heritage.


Heroes Remember: Chinese-Canadian Veterans

Veteran Affairs Canada’s Heroes Remember presents 21 veterans who speak candidly about their wartime efforts.


Historica Canada

This website describes the Canada-Asia experience from earliest times to the present day. The website discusses the Asian experience in Canada, and the evolution of Canadian society, from exclusion to greater tolerance including the embracing of diversity.


The Ties that Bind

The Ties That Bind: Building the CPR, Building a Place in Canada examines the struggle of communities of Chinese heritage in Canada, to establish their identity and roots in Canada. This online project was developed by The Foundation to Commemorate the Chinese Railroad Workers in Canada.


The Virtual Museum of Asian Canadian Cultural Heritage (VMACCH)

In showcasing Asian Canadian heritage, VMACCH enables Asian Canadians to share their heritage among themselves and with the rest of Canada. The website also features works by Canadian artists of Asian heritage and encourages participation in the cultural life of Canada. It is also a valuable teaching resource for schools on Asian heritage and culture.

Diverse/ Combined Migration Stories & Histories

Literature

New Canadian Kid and Invisible Kids by Dennis Foon Playwrights Canada, 2005 Grade 4-8 / Ages 9-14 

Two plays about the immigration experience, featuring “gibberish” that the Canadians speak, and English that the newcomers speak.  Readers/ viewers experience immigration from the newcomer’s point of view. In New Canadian Kid, Nick has just moved to Canada from a country called Homeland, where he is forced to grapple with his fears of a new culture and language and cope with classmates who taunt him for being different. In Invisible Kids, a group of children from a variety of backgrounds discover playground politics.


Our New Home: Immigrant Children Speak (non-fiction) Edited by Emily Hearn & Marywinn Milne 2007 Grades 3-4 / Ages 8-12 

From the diverse cultures of Pakistan, Sri Lanka, the Philippines, Vietnam, Germany, Guyana, Somalia, and others, immigrant children write of their experiences leaving their homes and moving to a new country. The stories, poems and pictures in Our New Home tell of the fear and sadness, excitement and challenge of moving around the world and forging a new sense of self in a new land


Piece by Piece: Stories About Fitting into Canada Edited by Teresa Toten 2010

Grades 7-8 / Ages 12 and up 

This young-adult anthology features original stories by some of Canada's finest writers who were born in another country and who struggled to fit in

Indigenous Stories & Histories

Literature

Shin-chi’s Canoe by Nicola Campbell,

Shi-shi-etko by Nicola Campbell

Arctic Stories by Kusugak, Michael Arvaarluk.

Phyllis’s Orange Shirt, by Phyllis Webstad 

Not My Girl by Jordan-Fenton – a partial autobiography of a girl and her experiences coming home from residential schoo.

Fatty Legs by Jordan-Fenton and  Margaret Pokiak-Fenton.   

As Long As The Rivers Flow by Larry Loyie.

No Time to Say Goodbye: Children’s Stories of Kuper Island Residential School by Sylvia Olsen, Rita Morris, and Ann Sam.

500 Years of Resistance Comic Book by Gord Hill

Goodbye Buffalo Bay by Loyie Larry

Videos/ Testimony

The Clifford Quaw Story: My number was 26 The Clifford Quaw Story is a multi-part series that recounts Lheidli T'enneh Elder's experiences at Lejac Residential School in the 1960s.

Lesson Plans, Activities & Other Resources

Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada: 94 Calls to Action 

Orange Shirt Day: 

September 30 is Orange Shirt Day, a movement of commemoration inspired by the experience of Phyllis (Jack) Webstad, a residential school survivor who had her new orange shirt taken away from her on her first day of school at St. Joseph Mission Residential School. Learn more about Orange Shirt Day

Indian Residential School History and Dialogue Centre, University of British Columbia A dedicated venue and digital space at the University of British Columbia for the public to seek support and resources on the history of residential schools. 

BC Treaty : Understanding the Treaty Process

First Peoples Principles of Learning: https://www.bced.gov.bc.ca/abed/principles_of_learning.pdf

UBC Museum of Anthropology: Comprehensive teaching Resources (Lessons, Activities, Multi-media)


Films

National Film Board Orange Shirt Day playlist featuring stories about residential schools and their Survivors plus online collections of Indigenous-made films. 

British Columbia: An Untold History”: Episode 1 titled “Change + Resistance” highlights the perseverance of Indigenous peoples through years of oppression and criminalization in BC. 


Treaty/ Territories Maps

Native Land: Interactive Digital Map

Canadian Geographic: Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada

Canadian Geographic: Indigenous Nations Treaty Territories Floor Map

 

Residential Schools

Indian Residential Schools & Reconciliation: Teacher Resource Guide http://www.fnesc.ca/wp/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/PUB-LFP-IRSR-5-2015-07-WEB.pdf

The Life of a Child in a BC Indian Residential School: BCTF Aboriginal Education Program: Gladys We Never Knew –

https://bctf.ca/uploadedFiles/Public/AboriginalEd/GladysResource/eBook.pdf

 

Teaching Guides

Alberta Ed. Aboriginal Content Validation Form_

Elder Protocol

Historica Canada Residential Schools Guide

Think Before You Appropriate: A Guide with Sample Activities

 

Other

Blanket Exercise: https://bctf.ca/uploadedFiles/Public/AboriginalEducation/KAIROS_2016BlanketExerciseBC.pdf

Talking Circles: http://www.learnalberta.ca/content/aswt/talkingtogether/facilitated_talking_circle_fact_sheet.html

150 Acts of Reconciliation for the Last 150 Days of Canada’s 150: 

*Consider engaging students in an action project around one or several of these: http://activehistory.ca/2017/08/150-acts-of-reconciliation-for-the-last-150-days-of-canadas-150/

Educational Resource Review - Indo-Fijian Canadians

Rianna created educational resources based on her family's history and migration story. Her educational resource review document also includes educational resources in connection to her family history and their identities as Indo-Fijian Canadians.

Teacher Candidate
Rianna Lal

Year
July 2022

Educational Resource Review - South Asian Migration

Mahima created a lesson plan and educational resources focusing on thematic elements of a migration story from PCHC Archives. Tariq Malik’s Migration Story: Decolonizing the Mind and Reclaiming the Spirit by Patara McKeen is used as a resource in conjunction with When Stars are Scattered by Victoria Jamieson and Omar Mohamed.

Teacher Candidate
Mahima Sharma

Year
July 2022

Click here for Mahima’s lesson plan focusing on thematic elements of a migration story from PCHC Archives.

Click here for Mahima’s educational resources linked to Tariq Malik’s migration story - for use with the re-designed BC Curriculum (2016).

Japanese Migration Stories & Histories

Lesson Plans, Activities & Resources

Japanese Canadian National Museum – British Columbia

The Museum’s mission is to collect, preserve, interpret, and exhibit artifacts and archives relating to the history of Canadians of Japanese heritage from the 1870s to present, and to communicate the Japanese Canadian experience and contributions as an integral part of Canada's history and multicultural society.

The Nikkei Museum and Cultural Centre in Burnaby, BC 

Nikkei Place - Ask an Elder

 

Japanese Canadian History - Politics of Racism

 

Nikkei Place Resources

 

Landscapes of Injustice Teacher Resources

  

East of the Rockies This experimental augmented-reality narrative written by 83-year-old Joy Kogawa, one of Canada’s most acclaimed and celebrated literary figures. The story is told from the perspective of Yuki, a 17-year-old girl forced from her home and made to live in the Slocan internment camp during the Second World War. **Note: to enter the experience you must download the app to an Apple device

 

Heritage Minutes: Vancouver Asahi This short video shares the story of the Vancouver Asahi, a successful amateur baseball team that won multiple league titles from 1914-1941. In 1942, after Canada declared war on Japan, 22,000 Japanese Canadians were interned in camps, including the Asahi players.

 

NFB: Minoru: Memory of Exile

This 18-minute film combines animation with archival material. Hear the story of Minoru; during WWII, he and his family were branded as enemies of Canada, sent to internment camps in British Columbia and finally deported to Japan.

NFB: Enemy Alien

This documentary (from 1975) tells the story of Japanese Canadians who fought to be accepted as Canadians. Hear the personal stories of Japanese Canadians who were interned in camps during WWII.

Vanishing B.C. Japanese Canadian Internment Sites

This website has an annotated collection of photographs related to Japanese internment camps in the Slocan Valley, BC.