This paper describes a small case study generally conceptualized to investigate the role of picture books as a discourse in Canadian identity, focusing specifically on the construction of what it means to be Canadian from an Australian point of view. What emerged, however, was less about Canadian identity and more about how Australian students used the text and illustrations to integrate “new” knowledge about Canada by aligning, and at times contrasting, themselves with others
Beginnings to the 1890s : Canadian children's books in the imperial era -- The 1890s to the 1950s : ...
A growing body of research demonstrates that texts used in Canadian English classes are not reflecti...
Jeffries (2004, p. 4) defines national identity as ' ... a shared sense of belonging of a group of p...
The pre-service teachers who negotiate their own sense of national identity are challenged and their...
In this study, I establish that language textbooks are sites of discursive struggle through which na...
The link between national identity and children’s picture books has been established in several coun...
This review of recent Canadian picture books consides notions of identity, community and memory and ...
This study examines the diverse ways students perceive Canada, Canadians, and themselves as Canadian...
This book explores the evolution of Canadian and Australian national identities in the era of decolo...
The issue of national identity is a central concern for learners both in terms of formal education (...
grantor: University of TorontoMulticultural education often conjures up images of classroo...
There is a unique Canadian-ness to be found in the illustrations of Canadian children's fiction pub...
Canada is becoming more and more diverse due to welcoming immigrants from all over the world. Redefi...
The notable trauma experienced by Indigenous Canadian peoples at residential schools is only now, in...
The purpose of this qualitative case study was to theoretically conceptualize the ways that a set of...
Beginnings to the 1890s : Canadian children's books in the imperial era -- The 1890s to the 1950s : ...
A growing body of research demonstrates that texts used in Canadian English classes are not reflecti...
Jeffries (2004, p. 4) defines national identity as ' ... a shared sense of belonging of a group of p...
The pre-service teachers who negotiate their own sense of national identity are challenged and their...
In this study, I establish that language textbooks are sites of discursive struggle through which na...
The link between national identity and children’s picture books has been established in several coun...
This review of recent Canadian picture books consides notions of identity, community and memory and ...
This study examines the diverse ways students perceive Canada, Canadians, and themselves as Canadian...
This book explores the evolution of Canadian and Australian national identities in the era of decolo...
The issue of national identity is a central concern for learners both in terms of formal education (...
grantor: University of TorontoMulticultural education often conjures up images of classroo...
There is a unique Canadian-ness to be found in the illustrations of Canadian children's fiction pub...
Canada is becoming more and more diverse due to welcoming immigrants from all over the world. Redefi...
The notable trauma experienced by Indigenous Canadian peoples at residential schools is only now, in...
The purpose of this qualitative case study was to theoretically conceptualize the ways that a set of...
Beginnings to the 1890s : Canadian children's books in the imperial era -- The 1890s to the 1950s : ...
A growing body of research demonstrates that texts used in Canadian English classes are not reflecti...
Jeffries (2004, p. 4) defines national identity as ' ... a shared sense of belonging of a group of p...