Some of these activities can be done in the classroom, but some are better left for the outdoors or the gymnasium. All of these activities should be demonstrated and supervised by the teacher. It is important to make sure the students understand the need to respect other people and other cultures.


Social Topics

- Draw a picture of the people who live in your house. How many people are there? If you live with just your family, do you know someone who shares their house with their extended family (other people like grandparents or aunts and uncles)?

- Describe what a whole day and night in a longhouse might be like for someone your age, if they couldn't go outside. What kinds of things might they do? Think about what you do at your house when you can't go outside. How does the amount of space influence the types of things that you do?

- Compare the kinds of games played in the Arctic with the ones that people played on the Northwest Coast and in the Eastern Woodlands. What impact did the environment have on the types of games that the people played?

- You could also try out some of the games with your classmates or your siblings.


Food Topics


- Compare types of food with the Inuit, the Haida, and the Huron

- Where do you get your food? Do you have a garden, or do you buy everything from the store? What kinds of things do think you could eat if you had to survive outside? (CAUTION: DO NOT EVER EAT ANYTHING IN THE WILD, MEANING OUTSIDE YOUR HOUSE OR A RESTAURANT, UNLESS YOU ARE WITH AN EXPERT.)

- Try to grow your own corn or beans. This is a good activity to do as a class or on your own. You could try to dry some corn by hanging it and then try to grind it into cornmeal. You could also find a recipe of an authentic First Nations dish and try it out. www.kstrom.net/isk/food/r_corn.html

- Where do you store food in your house? What kinds of things do we do to make food last a longtime?

Building Topics


- Would an igloo fit in your classroom? Move the desks into a circle. Take the meter stick and mark out how big an igloo might be. You could also do this on the field or in the gym. If you were really energetic, you could take a measuring tape and measure out how big a Huron longhouse and a Haida house might be. How many people can you fit in these spaces? How long can you stay inside these spaces?

- Draw a First Nations house or a totem pole.


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