Leaf Budding Moon
May
ᓵᑭᐸᑳᐃᐧᐲᓯᒼ sâkipakâwipîsim is the leaf budding moon.
Past Moons
ᓂᐢᑭᐲᓯᒼ niskipîsim Goose Moon is March. Month the geese return.
ᐊᔩᑭᐃᐧᐲᓯᒼ ayîkiwipîsim Frog Moon is April. The frogs awaken and begin to sing.
Monthly Highlights
Community Engagement
Art with Connie Kulhavy
Uncas Elementary enjoyed a family night Wednesday April 17th. They enjoyed painting with Métis knowledge holder and artist-in-residence Connie Kulhavy. Soup and bannock were served while families learned about Métis culture, and how to paint a birch bark scene. Over one hundred families registered for this wonderful evening.
"Students always create such beautiful pieces and love to express themselves." -Connie Kulhavy
Curriculum Highlights
Professional Learning Session
Oral Traditions and Land as a Text: May 29, 2024
Elk Island Public School teachers are invited to join Taryn, Kristen and Natalie to learn about Oral Traditions and Land as Text
Employee target audience: Gr 4-6 Teachers
Where do stories exist outside of a printed text? We’ll explore the roles attentiveness and observation versus comprehension and listening have in engaging with story. We will spend the day outside connecting to place and each other. You will leave with ideas ready to use in your classroom right away!
Registration Open!
Welcome to Nicole Polukoshko!
Language Updates
Northern Michif with Elder Mary SkyBlue Morin
Online Language Classes continue every Thursday until June 13th! The classes will start at 6pm-7:30pm. Knowledge Holder Sky Blue Morin offers Elk Island students and families the opportunity to walk through the basics of learning our Michif Language! Follow along, take notes, practice and speak!
Registration Open!
Michif Makers TV Show
EIPS Teacher Anna Fiddler-Berteig is one of the creative people creating the show which will debut on APTN. "Michif Makers," a new web series coming to audiences this spring, say their work aims to teach young children about Métis culture and language by following the adventures of two puppets.
Prairie to Woodlands Language Resources
Check out this online course to learn and practice Michif. Also includes a dictionary and historical connections.
Moose Hide Campaign Day
Moose Hide Campaign
A special announcement from the Moose Hide Campaign family! They are honoured to invite you and your students to join us in a day of ceremony, learning, and action for Moose Hide Campaign Day on Thursday, May 16, 2024.
This year, they are so excited to welcome our Keynote speaker, Larissa Crawford. Larissa proudly passes on Métis and Jamaican ancestry to her daughter, Zyra, and is a published Indigenous, anti-racism, and climate justice researcher, policy advisor, and restorative circle keeper with 15 years of experience. Larissa is the Founder of Future Ancestors Services, a youth-led professional services social enterprise that operates at the intersection of climate and racial justice. Larissa will speak on the grades 5-12 livestream and host her own video workshop.
Welcome Larissa and Canadians across the country who are standing together in solidarity for this cause!
Need more information? Please reach out. We are here to support you on this journey.
Community Connections
North Saskatchewan River designated a Canadian Heritage River!
On March 22, the entire section of the river flowing in Alberta was designated under the Canadian Heritage River System. Heritage places reflect Alberta's diverse history.
The North Saskatchewan River is a traditional gathering place, travel route, and home to Indigenous peoples including the nêhiyawak (Cree), Niitsitapi (Blackfoot), Ktunaxa, Métis, Nakota Sioux, Iroquois, Dene, Ojibwe, Saulteaux, Anishinaabe, Inuit, and Assiniboine.
The river is known as kisiskâciwani-sîpiy, meaning “swift-flowing river” in nêhiyawêwin (Cree), and Omaka-ty, meaning “the big river” in Niitsitapi (Blackfoot). This designation provides an opportunity to foster support for wider use of Indigenous languages and cultural connections to this important waterway.
For centuries, the river was a transportation and trade route, first for Indigenous peoples, then settlers and explorers coming from the east to the Rocky Mountains. kisiskâciwani-sîpiy played a pivotal role in the fur trade, early scientific expeditions, human settlement patterns and agriculture.
Artist Showcase
The Circle of Life by Alex Janvier, Main rotunda in Muttart Conservatory
Alex Janvier was born in 1935 and is of Dene sųłı̨né́ and Saulteaux descent. At the age eight, he was sent to the Blue Quills Indian Residential School near St. Paul, Alberta. Janvier speaks of having a creative instinct from as far back as he can remember, and says he was given the tools to create his first paintings at the residential school. Unlike many Aboriginal artists of his time, he received formal training and graduated with honours from Calgary’s Alberta College of Art in 1960. Immediately after graduation, he took up a post at the University of Alberta.
Read more below!
Direct Student Supports
Study Help for Métis students Rupertsland Institute has secured access to Alberta ExamBank for K-12 Métis students to test their understanding through online practice. Métis students can sign up for the RECC Room to find the login for their MNA Region. Questions? Contact education@rupertsland.org.
Is your child in Grade 12 and looking to move on to post-secondary education? There are a variety of scholarships, bursaries and grants available to First Nations, Métis and Inuit students to attend trade school, college or university.
Indigenous youth are invited to apply to be an Ambassador of Hope. Applications are due May 20th, 2024. Find out more below!
Upcoming Dates
May 5th- Red Dress Day
May 6th- Elk Island Red Dress Day
May 10th- Bear Witness Day
May 15th- Elk Island Moose Hide Campaign Day
May 16th- National Moose Hide Campaign Day
May 28th- Fort Family Gathering
May 31st- School Lead Teacher Day