How were places named and was it right?
Activity Description
As we work towards decolonizing our curriculum and society, there is debate over renaming cities and infrastructure that were named for leaders, politicians, explorers and other people of import in the past, but stand for values that our current society no longer sees as acceptable. Students will be directed to determine if this is an issue, support their position and provide constructive feedback on the positions of their classmates. Students will also be engaged in the creation of evaluation criteria and rubrics.
Scope
This section would be the second topic to be covered within the Social Justice 12 course. There will be an element of direct instruction to ensure that students have a good grasp of the social studies and social justice concepts within the course.
Prerequisite
Social Studies 10 or 11. Literacy to utilize OneNote within Office 365.
Target Audience
Grade 11/12 students
Learning Outcomes
~Make reasoned ethical judgments about controversial actions in the past or present after considering the context and standards of right and wrong
~Can people of the past be celebrated for great achievements if they have also done things considered unethical today
Activity Materials
YouTube: short videos that highlight specific examples of location naming practices around the world and how they keep changing.
CBC Curio: a portion of The National that highlights the differing opinions that surround the changing of names, especially when those in question are in honour of a figure from the past.
Canadian Geographic Article: “Renaming places: how Canada is reexamining the map” this article focuses on the proposed renaming of Dundas Street in Toronto, providing details about Dundas and compares the past and present feelings about the history. The history of British Columbia’s naming is also touched upon and its perceptions, as well as talks about its un/popularity.
Office 365 (OneNote and Immersive Reader): my district, and many others, utilize the Office 365 Suite for secure access to technology. Students log in with their school district accounts, which ensures compliance with district policies and security of student’s information. These programs can also be accessed asynchronously for students that may need more time. The Immersive Reader is a text-to-speech feature within Office 365 and is accessible to all students.
Whole Unit Assessments
Assessments |
Weight (%) |
Learning Outcomes being covered |
Problem Identification |
30% |
Make reasoned ethical judgments about controversial actions in the past of present |
Defense of position |
30% |
Can people of the past be celebrated for great achievements if they have also done things considered unethical today |
Criteria/Rubric Creation |
10% |
|
SWAY Presentation |
20% |
Uses a variety of digital media (text, images, audio, and movie) to express him/herself
creatively |
Peer Feedback |
10% |
Activity Blueprint
Section |
Time |
Instructions |
Resources |
1.1 |
10-15 mins |
|
|
1.2 |
30 min |
|
YouTube “Countries that Changed their Names” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CxFUJuXHI6M |
1.3 |
15 min |
|
|
1.4 |
10 min |
|
OneNote
Laptop or desktop computers (lab) Immersive Reader |
1.5 |
30 |
|
OneNote
Laptop or desktop computers (lab) Immersive Reader |
2.1 |
15 min |
|
|
2.2 |
30 mins |
|
OneNote
Laptop or desktop computers (lab) Immersive Reader |
2.3 |
15 mins |
|
OneNote
Laptop or desktop computers (lab) Immersive Reader |
2.4 |
15 mins |
|
Curio.ca: The National – “John A. Macdonald’s Complicated Legacy”
https://curio.ca/en/video/john-a-macdonalds-complicated-legacy-15294/ OneNote Laptop or desktop computers (lab) Immersive Reader |
2.5 |
Homework |
|
Canadian Geographic: “Renaming places how Canada is reexamining the map” https://www.canadiangeographic.ca/article/renaming-places-how-canada-reexamining-map |
UDL Guidelines
Representation
Even though all students will be working within OneNote, how they choose to show their learning is up to them, be it notes or images. The Immersive Reader feature of Office 365 is a text-to-speech application that translate any selected text into speech. All questions will be presented on a SmartBoard or OneNote with the ability to be magnified if need be for visual ease. All vocabulary will be clearly defined. Videos that are shown will be viewed with subtitles as a universal support. Videos will also be linked within OneNote should students need to view the video with subtitles other than English. Previous knowledge is activated with the daily question, reminding students of the previous days topic. Students are encouraged to generalize their criteria before focusing on specifics.
Action and Expression
Students will have the ability to express themselves in notes, images or even video within the OneNote application. Access to the Immersive Reader will always be allowed and available for all students. Students will be encouraged to communicate with each other as they complete their observations. Class discussions will aid in the managing of information to ensure clear understanding.
Engagement
Students will be encouraged to form and defend their own opinions on the subject matter, it being made clear that there is no right or wrong answer/position to the topic. Students will have the choice how they wish to present their thoughts.
Full Activity Resources and References
Bates, A. W. (2015). Chapter 8: Choosing and using media in education: The SECTIONS model. In Teaching in a digital age: Guidelines for designing teaching and learning. Vancouver, BC: Tony Bates Associates Ltd. Retrieved from https://opentextbc.ca/teachinginadigitalage/part/9-pedagogical-differences-between-media/
CAST (2011). Universal design for learning guidelines version 2.0. Wakefield, MA: Author.
“Countries that Changed their Names” (2019, September 20). Retrieved November 21, 2021, from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CxFUJuXHI6M
Garrison, D. R., Anderson, T., & Archer, W. (2000). Critical inquiry in a text-based environment: Computer conferencing in higher education. The Internet and Higher Education, 2 (2-3), 87-105. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1096-7516(00)00016-6
Hayward. (2021, July 22). Renaming places: How Canada is reexamining the map. Retrieved from https://www.canadiangeographic.ca/article/renaming-places-how-canada-reexamining-map. Accessed November 21, 2021.
“John A Macdonald’s Complicated Legacy” 2014-2021, C. (n.d.). Retrieved November 21, 2021, from https://curio.ca/en/video/john-a-macdonalds-complicated-legacy-15294
Moore, M. G. (1989). Editorial:Three types of interaction. American Journal of Distance Education, 3 (2), 1-7. Retrieved from http://aris.teluq.uquebec.ca/portals/598/t3_moore1989.pdf
December 9, 2021 at 9:41 pm
Hi Kate
Interesting topic, one whose theme could be utilized in many courses. Have you tried this out in class yet? I am wondering if any of your students have subsequently adjusted their own names? A number of my students have done that lately and I have wondered the motivation behind the name changes. I also find your question about naming a place you discovered, as it also addresses the idea is there really many places on the planet that have not been visited by others before us. Have you really ‘discovered’ it? Thanks for posting this, I can be applicability to the biology class I teach with regards to species and genera names and human tissue names e.g. Schwann cells for insulating cells around peripheral neurons. Lots to think about.
Jim
December 11, 2021 at 2:12 pm
Hi Jim,
Thank you for the feedback! Sadly, I do not have a classroom of my own this year, but I am hoping a coworker will try it out with her classes. I have a handful of students that have changed their names, but have never given a reason why. I am hoping that providing students with the reasoning from this lesson might serve to help them explain their choices. I am excited that this could be used in science!
Cheers,
Kate-Nicola
December 18, 2021 at 6:15 pm
HI Kate-Nicola,
This is such an interesting topic in the classroom! I read Should British Columbia’s Name be Changed? Some Municipalities Think So by Robinson (2021) in the Vancouver Sun earlier this year and it shifted my thinking; it may also be a helpful resource for you: https://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/british-columbia-name-flamed-some-b-c-municipalities-down-on-the-crown.
In my area, Stó:lō Tourism (n.d.) offers Hal’qeméylem Place Names Bus Tours. I am hoping to attend a tour this summer to learn the Hal’qeméylem place names and stories in our community: http://www.stolotourism.com/tours. It might be interesting to do a similar outing or have an Elder or knowledge keeper speak to your students.
Regarding names, I experience people trying to Anglicize my name without any encouragement from me. I often get called Georgina, Regina, or Jean. Despite repeated corrections, the behavior persisted as ‘it was easier to say and remember.’ Last year, I pointed out that persisting to change my name to the English translation is a form of colonialism, because others are imposing their language another culture. The behavior has mostly stopped.
Some of the post secondary students I work with use an English name when they start their program as they perceive they will be better accepted by their peers and faculty, but then change it to their actual name before graduating. I wonder if some of the students that are perceived as changing their name are reclaiming their culture?
Best,
Gena
References
Robinson, M. (2021, May 18). Should British Columbia’s name be changed? Some municipalities think so. Vancouver Sun. https://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/british-columbia-name-flamed-some-b-c-municipalities-down-on-the-crown
Stó:lō Tourism. (n.d.). Stó:lō cultural tours. http://www.stolotourism.com/tours