The Medicine Wheel
Unfortunately for my own education, I was first taught about the Medicine Wheel when I was a teacher in Kashechewan during the Great Moon Gathering (a professional development opportunity). The workshop focused on addictions and mental health and brought in the Medicine Wheel and its teachings around health an well-being.
I had "bumped into" the Medicine Wheel over the years, but it was never a focus or explicitely brought up as something educators can use in the classroom. It wasn't until our administrators invited an Elder who resides in the Napanee area (if I remember correctly) to begin our Professional Development day with Medicine Wheel teachings. Our staff gathered in a circle around a giant, fabric Medicine Wheel that had been laid down in our library. We learned how the Medicine Wheel represents many teachings and explanations of how life and the world work. The Elder used pictures mounted on construction paper to show us how it teaches us about health, seasonal cycles, life cycles, stages of life, the cardinal directions, four sacred medicines, races of humankind, the elements, and more. She also taught us that the Medicine Wheel is a symbol that represents "that Indigenous teachings take place here" - that it is a safe and inclusive environment (I immediately made a connection to how many educators and others have rainbows or other LGBTQ ally stickers or signs displayed.).
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Medicine Wheel |
Not all Indigenous Peoples and Nations use the Medicine Wheel. Some use colours other than Yellow, Red, Black, and White. Some have them in a different configuration in the circle. If you're wishing to incorporate the Medicine Wheel in your space, please take a look and see what is used in your region. In this post, I will be referring to the Medicine Wheel with yellow in the East, red in the South, black in the West, and white in the North. My RECE partner this year taught me that the white should always be pointing to the North and teachings begin in the East (I remember this because the Sun rises in the East, thus starting the day).
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Here are some easy ways that I incorporated the Medicine Wheel (and literature!) into our butterfly inquiry. We raised Painted Lady Caterpillars and watched then turn to chrysalises then released the butterflies in our Grow Garden. I plan on including Black Line Masters like these in the resource collaboration project that I'll be working on this summer. |
It got better. Our technology teacher built a few Medicine Wheel tables for our school! Because infusing FNMI content into our classroom was happening so much this year, we were chosen to have one in our room! She's extremely talented and kind - and happened to be taking the
Indigenous Education AQ course online (and we supplied her with tons of lessons, pictures, and videos of student learning in return).
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Here's the Medicine Wheel table that was made by our amazing tech teacher! |
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Our first inquiry and teaching with the Medicine Wheel table was about the seasonal cycle. This coincided with Spring weather and lots of student talk about worms, birds, insects, and gardening. We gathered loose parts from around the room and students sorted them by season (also important to note that some things, like butterflies, can belong in a few areas). This was wonderful for oral language and critical thinking! Can you tell which colour is which season? Can you see the connections to Ontario Grade 1 Science and Ontario Kindergarten's Problem Solving and Innovating (sorting various ways)? |
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A conversation about a pet that passed away started conversations about the cycle of life. One Kindergarten student put it profoundly, "Things die so there can be new life. Like, old cats die but there's always baby kittens." We started looking through our stash of National Geographic magazines for pictures of people and animals in various stages of life. Students helped me glue them down on construction paper (arranging to minimize paper waste - a spacial awareness activity!) to prevent confusion with what's on the back. Can you see how they sorted? |
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This year, our students were really interested in researching animals on PebbleGo.com. On a world map, they'd often sort toy animals by which continents they're found (for example, placing a toy koala on Australia and polar bear in northern Canada or other polar region). I used an outline of a map and my clipart to show where some animals, buildings, and other things are from. I added a star where our city is. Students sorted pictures based on where they are in relation to us! Many students even showed an understanding of intermediate directions, (NE, SE, SW, NW) and placed pictures on the borders between colours! Do you see the explicit connections to the Ontario Grade 2 curriculum? |
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We read How Chipmunk Got His Stripes and the book refers to how the Sun rises in the East and sets in the West. Time to bring in our Medicine Wheel table! During my planning time, I went through my clipart to find pictures depicting what happens during different times of the day. This also brought out a lot of oral communication skills and collaboration. Do you see the explicit connection to Ontario Grade 1 Science? |
I have connected with a local Elder to collaborate and make a resource so incorporating the Medicine Wheel into your classroom is much easier - and plan on including print-and-go resources as seen above (but a bit more refined!). That's my summer project and I'll post a link here when it's done!
Residential Schools
This is a very sensitive - but important, subject. Like other topics, I have heard arguments against introducing residential schools to students in the primary years (K-3). However, I feel that sensitive or "difficult" topics can be introduced to children with age-appropriate conversations and resources. They do not need all of the details and controversies with young children - but I also feel like this topic shouldn't be a surprise in the Intermediate years and in high school. It is a horrible time in Canadian history (Did you know the last residential school closed in 1996?), but it cannot be erased nor forgotten.
In Kindergarten, we always stress kindness and acceptance. Treat others well. Be kind. Help others. Celebrate differences. Be empathetic. I've used these principles when resolving bullying issues and social disagreements (
MEND conversations), with LGBTQ texts (like
10,000 Dresses or
And Tango Makes Three), celebrating World Down Syndrome Day, celebrating Autism Awareness Month, Black History Month (Yes, we celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day and I tell students he was shot and killed by somebody who didn't like him.), and with introducing residential schools as well. I have used Eve Bunting's
Terrible Things: An Allegory of The Holocaust in Grades 1/2 in the past.
One way I have put it is, "There were people living on Turtle Island before people from Europe came on the ships. (These peoples, we now refer to as First Nations and Inuit.) Many people who came on the boats and their children and children's children, and so on (descendents) did not like the people who were here first and tried to control them. They forced children to be away from their families and live at school. A lot of people working in the school were not nice to the children. They cut their hair, didn't let them speak their own language or wear their own clothing, and even changed their names! Many children were hurt and some even died. Some tried to run away. These were called residential schools and they were open for a very long time, all across our country."
Many students add to the conversation. Why is your name important? How is the way you wear your hair part of your identity? Do you speak another language? What role do your parents, extended family, and community play in your upbringing? They all agree that residential schools were not a nice thing. They understand why it is important that we learn from historical mistakes and honour our diversities and the history of this land. (As for curriculum connections, there are connections in Social Studies as well as Kindergarten's Belonging and Contributing frame.)
Other Activities
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We painted pinecones (collected during our community walk) to look like strawberries to celebrate the Strawberry Moon! |
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After learning that Beaver teaches Wisdom and visiting a local beaver's habitat, we build beaver dams out of plasticine, rocks, and twigs. We could check how water-tight they were by pouring water on one side and comparing water levels. I even had little beaver figurines available!
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We read Nanabosho Steals Fire, which reminds me a lot about Prometheus (I minored in Classical Civilizations!). This legend also explains why rabbits change colour with the seasons (and so do some other animals). My RECE partner brought in two rabbit pelts: one brown and one white - an idea I got from the ECE classroom speaker in Sharbot Lake years ago! |
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An eagle talon - brought in by a student! |
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Beaver teeth - brought in by a student! |
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We read The Water Walker and students made posters to promote taking care of our water sources (we are located on Lake Ontario) to put up around the school. The book calls North America Turtle Island, so it reminded students of our excellent Turtle Island book. |
My Picture Book / Read-Aloud Book List
- Thirteen Moons on Turtle's Back: A Native American Year of Moons (Bruchac & London)
- Thirteen Moons on Turtle's Back (Sandra Samattee)
- Turtle Island (retold by Bobbie and Gentle)
- Giving Thanks: A Native American Good Morning Message (Chief Jake Swamp)
- Turtle's Race with Beaver (Bruchac & Bruchac)
- The First Beaver (Caroll Simpson)
- The Legend of Beaver's Tail (Stephanie Shaw)
- The Story of the Three Little Beavers and the Big Bad Wolf (Bobbie and Gentle)
- Maple Moon (Connie Brummel Crook)
- Goose Moon (Carol Arden)
- The First Strawberries: A Cherokee Story (retold by Joseph Bruchac)
- Everybody Needs A Rock (Byrd Baylor)
- Nipin and the Rocks (Victoria Bouvier)
- Trudy's Rock Story (Trudy Spiller)
- Dawn Flight: A Lakota Story (Kevin Locke)
- The Medicine Wheel: Stories of a Hoop Dancer (Teddy Anderson)
- The Sharing Circle (Theresa "Corky" Larsen-Jonasson)
- Nanabosho Grants a Wish (Joe & Matrine McLellan)
- The Birth of Nanabosho (Joseph McLellan)
- Nanabosho and the Butterflies (Joe & Matrine McLellan)
- Nanabosho Steals Fire (Joseph McLellan)
- Nanabosho: How the Turtle got its Shell (Joe McLellan)
- Nanabosho Dances (Joe McLellan)
- Nikik and Wapus Save the People (Joe McLellan)
- Zomo the Rabbit: A Trickster Tale from West Africa (Gerald McDermott)
* This trickster rabbit reminds me of Nanabosho, so I have included it on this list.
- How Chipmunk Got His Stripes (Joseph & James Bruchac)
- The Bear's Long Tail: A Tale Retold (Jane Chartrand)
- Storm Boy (Paul Owen Lewis)
- How the Sun was Born - Como el Sol Nacio (written and illustrated by third-grade stuents at Drexel Elementary School, Tucson, Arizona)
* I studied Spanish as a student in Texas and have had Spanish-First-Language students in my school.
- Raven: A Trickster Tale from the Pacific Northwest (Gerald McDermott)
- How Raven Stole the Sun (Maria Williams)
- The Raven and the Loon (Rachel & Sean Qitsaulik-Tinsley)
- The Little Hummingbird (Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas)
* The ETFO Primary Arts resource uses this book.
- The Raven (eaglecrestbooks.com)
- Alaska's First People (Judy Ferguson)
- a northern alphabet (Ted Harrison)
- Sweetest Kulu (Celina Kalluk)
- My Arctic 123 (Michael Arvaarluk Kusugak)
- The Lonely Inukshuk (written and illustrated by students Inuglak School - Whale Cove, Nunavut)
- Hide and Sneak (Michael Arvaarluk Kusugak)
- The Delta is My Home (Tom McLeod & Mindy Willett)
- A Promise is a Promise (Robert Munsch & Michael Kusugak)
- Smelly Socks (Robert Munsch)
- Bear for Breakfast (Robert Munsch, illustrated by Jay Odjick)
- Blackflies (Robert Munsch, illustrated by Jay Odjick)
- Totem Poles (a PebbleGo nonfiction book)
- Jingle Dancer (Cynthia Leitich Smith)
- Anishinabe Nation Colouring Book (given to our class by the Union of Ontario Indians)
- Alex Shares his Wampum Belt (Kelly Crawford)
- Dakota Talks About Treaties (Kelly Crawford)
- You Hold Me Up (Monique Gray Smith)
- Our Healthy Journey: A Collection of First Nations Children's Perspectives (available via PDF)
- Lila and the Crow (Gabrielle Grimard)
- Stolen Words (Melanie Florence, illustrated by Gabrielle Grimard)
- When We Were Alone (David A. Robertson)
- The Water Walker (Joanne Robertson)
- Sometimes I Feel Like A Fox (Danielle Daniel)
- Catcha Bear and the Seven Teachings series (7 books)
- Good Morning World (artwork by Paul Windsor, Haisla, Heiltsuk)
- Learn the Alphabet with Northwest Coast Native Art
- Learn to Count with Northwest Coast Native Art
- Sharing Our World: Animals of the Native Northwest Coast
More Resources
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"#FNMIEducation doesn’t always have to be an elaborate lesson. It can look as simple as reading a book by an Indigenous author or an author who co-wrote with an Indigenous community." |
Molly of Denali is a television show for children. It's available online through
CBC (Canada) and PBS (USA). From what I've read, the characters are voiced predominantly by Indigenous Peoples and the episodes often celebrate culture and life in the North. Each episode includes 2 stories, between which are real-life clips. The first episode,
Grandpa's Drum, includes some references to "boarding schools" (residential schools) and loss if identity/culture (assimilation).
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Epic! (free for educators) has a lot of FNMI books, including newer releases. You can search in the top toolbar - for example, search "First Nations." Many publications are American, so I caution you to be aware of that and their less-stringent uses of terminology and representations. |
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50% of the sales of this resource will be donated to the Gord Downie and Chanie Wenjack Fund while the remaining 50% will be used to fund FNMI learning opportunities for my students (Elder visits, field trips, purchase of items and books, etc.). |