草莓污视频导航

Sept. 27, 2022

Indigenous Studies students learn from the land, in a good way

Traditional teachings and practices emphasized in Cultural Immersion Field Course as class members raise a tipi, prepare deer hide, and expand their understanding
class of students in front of tipi
Students in 草莓污视频导航鈥檚 International Indigenous Studies program learned about the land first-hand during the field course. Adela Kincaid

What does it mean to learn from the land? That鈥檚 one of the questions taken up this year in INDG 312, the program鈥檚 Cultural Immersion Field Course.

INDG 312 was offered this spring term in partnership with 脦y芒rhe-Nakoda community member Daryl Kootenay and co-ordinated by Dr. Adela Kincaid, PhD, assistant professor in the Faculty of Arts.

Kootenay says the importance of teaching in this way 鈥渋s that it places Indigenous people in a position to practise, deliver, and create what is taught. It is fundamental so that Indigenous Peoples share what they want to share and teach what they want.

students scraping a hide

Students are shown how to prepare a deer hide using traditional teachings and practices.

Adela Kincaid

鈥淏y delivering the course in this way we are partially fulfilling and asserting our rights as Indigenous people under the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples article #14 that upholds our rights to teach what we deem as appropriate to our cultural methods of teaching and learning.鈥

Dr. Daniel Voth, PhD, who completed his term as INDG program director in June, sees the course as 鈥渁n opportunity for students to learn in ways that centre people, land and relationships.鈥

Voth, associate professor in the Faculty of Arts, says, 鈥淥ne of the things we鈥檝e been doing in Indigenous studies is expanding our understanding of teachers and learners. We learn really interesting things in university classrooms, now we are also learning interesting and important lessons from the land with brilliant partners from Indigenous nations like Daryl. He鈥檚 helping to tip the teaching/learning relationship on its head in wonderfully productive ways.鈥

The course focuses on traditional teachings and practices that guide students through the preparation of a deer hide that is then used in the making of a parfleche. Kootenay presents students with an understanding of the Bow Valley from the 脦y芒rhe-Nakoda perspective. The teachings include land-based learning, deep listening, learning by doing, and guided visualizations.

The course is rooted in ii' taa'poh'to'p聽by 鈥淚ndigenous ways of knowing, and is sustained through traditions and protocols, ways of doing in practice by doing things in a 鈥榞ood way,鈥 ways of connecting via our connection to the land and with each other, and ways of being as the 草莓污视频导航 engages in institution-wide change to include Indigenous voice and cultural practices,鈥 says Elissa Twoyoungmen, Indigenous cultural education and protocol specialist from the Office of Indigenous Engagement.

parfleche

Adela Kincaid

The learning that happens in this course is a collaborative effort that practises Indigenous ways of connecting and relationship-building. The block week started in a good way when Elder Reg Crowshoe guided five tipi helpers to raise the tipi for the course. Twoyoungmen facilitated the creation of the space for our class and invited Siksika community members to help raise the tipi. It was so well done that it kept us warm and dry despite cool temperatures, rain, and strong winds

This year the course began with a pipe ceremony. A Knowledge Keeper, youth, and community members joined throughout the week to share strength-based approaches and to speak about community initiatives and their life journeys. Students had the opportunity to become immersed in song, self-reflections, scraping the hide and preparation techniques, followed by a guided vision exercise to create the design for their individual parfleches.

Students found the experience of learning in a tipi, from the land, and directly from 脦y芒rhe-Nakoda community members to be a transformative experience. This was the last class for four students taking the course and they were honoured to complete their undergraduate degrees with this unique experience.

Kootenay created an environment where there were meaningful connections formed within a real sense of community. One example of a collaborative land-based group exercise, called 鈥淚 notice, I am, We are,鈥 led to the creation of the following poetic story by students Marissa, Kate, Sara, Abishesh, and Andy, which was presented orally:

We are all stones in a circle
with raindrops darkening our surface
only to dry up leaving us
renewed underneath the way
tears streaming down our cheeks
leave us glowing once they dry
We are a wound creating a jewel
We are dandelion seeds
planted on earth to start our own journeys
We are in relation to the wind
We are the thistle
Dancing a geometry of spurs

The course will be offered again next spring in a block week format through the International Indigenous Studies program and supported by the Office of Indigenous Engagement. It is important to note that the course could not take place without funding for Indigenous community engagement from International Indigenous Studies, the Faculty of Arts, and the Office of Indigenous Engagement.

For more information on the course and how to enrol next spring, please email Dr. Adela Kincaid:聽 atkincai@ucalgary.ca


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