AbstractHistorical accounts of Indigenous education maintain that until the early 1950s settler and Indigenous children were educated in separate facilities regulated under separate legislation and overseen by separate authorities. This study illustrates that in British Columbia between 1901 and 1951, the dual system of schooling seemingly embodied in government policy was not implemented by federal or provincial authorities as strictly as historians have assumed. This article illuminates the ways that officials from both systems sometimes blurred the boundaries of policies and legislation that officially circumscribed students’ lives in order to enhance youngsters’ access to education.RésuméDes récits de l’histoire de l’éducation autochton...
‘Outdoor’ education receives ample attention in early education, as land and dominant developmental ...
This thesis is a non-empirical, anticolonial, historical, and political analysis of policy and publi...
The purpose of this article is to discuss how the Knowledge of the Canadian Indigenous peoples has b...
In 1951, the Canadian government changed the Indian Act to allow for the integration of previously s...
Following the 1949 recommendations of the Joint Committee of the Senate and House of Commons (SJC), ...
The Constitutional Act 1867 established a dual system of education in Canada – provincial authority ...
This article explores the unique circumstances surrounding the provincial school at Telegraph Creek ...
There exists persistent disparity in the achievement of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal public school ...
The evolution of Canadian federal policy for Native elementary and secondary education has followed ...
The Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development (DIAND)-imposed band-council governance at...
The Constitutional Act 1867 established a dual system of education in Canada – provincial authority ...
The paper addresses three educational policy documents created by the Ontario Ministry of Education ...
Canada’s history with the indigenous community is a long and complex. History which spills ove...
Two hundred years ago in 1814 in Australia, Governor Lachlan Macquarie developed a 15 point plan for...
The national Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada has challenged governments and school boa...
‘Outdoor’ education receives ample attention in early education, as land and dominant developmental ...
This thesis is a non-empirical, anticolonial, historical, and political analysis of policy and publi...
The purpose of this article is to discuss how the Knowledge of the Canadian Indigenous peoples has b...
In 1951, the Canadian government changed the Indian Act to allow for the integration of previously s...
Following the 1949 recommendations of the Joint Committee of the Senate and House of Commons (SJC), ...
The Constitutional Act 1867 established a dual system of education in Canada – provincial authority ...
This article explores the unique circumstances surrounding the provincial school at Telegraph Creek ...
There exists persistent disparity in the achievement of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal public school ...
The evolution of Canadian federal policy for Native elementary and secondary education has followed ...
The Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development (DIAND)-imposed band-council governance at...
The Constitutional Act 1867 established a dual system of education in Canada – provincial authority ...
The paper addresses three educational policy documents created by the Ontario Ministry of Education ...
Canada’s history with the indigenous community is a long and complex. History which spills ove...
Two hundred years ago in 1814 in Australia, Governor Lachlan Macquarie developed a 15 point plan for...
The national Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada has challenged governments and school boa...
‘Outdoor’ education receives ample attention in early education, as land and dominant developmental ...
This thesis is a non-empirical, anticolonial, historical, and political analysis of policy and publi...
The purpose of this article is to discuss how the Knowledge of the Canadian Indigenous peoples has b...