Colonization Consequences, A Deep Dive

Intro

Do you know all the facts about the Colonization ‘on our home on native land’? I doubt it. We researched the impact of colonization on Indigenous communities and the lasting consequences it has had on their cultures and societies. We explored the loss of land, language, and traditions.

Re-cap

Within this project, we were tasked with making an 11-15 slide keynote that answered our question ‘What were the consequences of colonization’ in a group of three to four. We presented it twice to the grade 11 BCFP class, and they filled out a feedback form after telling us how we did. They then designed a project for us, a mini keynote that had to answer the driving question in 2 slides and 6 words in total.

Driving Question

What were the Consequences of Colonization?

Favourites

Some of my favourite moments of this project was when we were presenting to the 11’s. We have a few slides in our keynote about the exploitation of the indigenous people both in the past, and the present, many of which, Carmyn was supposed to say. In both our first and second presentation, Carmyn would say ‘exfoliation’ instead of ‘exploitation’! It was both the most hilarious and mortifying part of the projects.

Keynotes

Group

I was put into a group with Carmyn, and Gemma to research and put together the slideshow. We separated and researched diffrent parts of consequences of colonization. I took ‘Pre-Colonial Health’, Gemma took ‘What diseases did the Europeans bring’ and Carmyn tackled ‘How did the disease affect the Indigenous Peoples’. We also researched the exploitation of the Indigenous peoples, and some of the history of colonization.

We presented our finished Keynote to the grade 11 BCFP class a few days ago. During our first presentation, we had a bit of trouble getting organized, and had a hard time with our cue cards. But I can see so much progress from our first to second presentation, which is shown in the cards the 11’s filled out after watching our presentation. The first group gave us feedback telling us that we could have been more prepared, with ‘less looking down at your notes’, but the second group had no negative feedback to give. ‘I thought it was good, no real criticism.’ It felt really good to get the feedback from the 11’s, and I hope we can do more projects with the other grades. It added a lot to the project, compared to if we were just presenting to our class. It felt like we should put in a bit more effort, and that we should care a little bit more what they thought because they had so much more experience in this thing than we had.

Oy…

Throughout this project my team and I had a lot of trouble figuring out how to distribute work in a fair way while still giving people realistic amounts of work to do. Some people are just able to get more work done in a shorter amount of time, and some people can’t. This does not have to have anything to do with how hard you are working, I have come to realize that some people’s brain just work differently. I don’t think we found the ‘sweet spot’ of work distribution during this project, but I do think it is possible to make a group work while all of the members within the group contribute equally no matter who the group members are.

Mini

After presenting our Keynote, the 11’s designed our next assignment. We were asked to make a 2 slides keynote with only 3 words per pages that answered our Driving Question. I Decided to focus on three main topics, Sickness and spread of Disease, Loss of Culture, and Death. I presented it to our class, and I am very happy with how it came out. The feedback I got from Ms Mc. was to ‘really YELL next time, project out to the audience, rather than to present to one side of the room. Began to speak very quickly…’ I agree with her feedback, and I will remember to speak up and slow down next time I am presenting. It always is nice to receive feedback, both good or bad, especially from a teacher. We don’t usually get such raw feedback during the year if we don’t specifically ask, so when a list of notes and critiques showed up on my showbie, I was more than excited to see what they had to say.

RPReplay_Final1715205078

So, what happened?

Colonization led to the mass genocide of the Indigenous People in all parts of the globe. In Canada, 80-95% of Indigenous People died from things connected to colonization. All of their deaths are definitely a consequence of colonization, the consequence to me. There is no way to imagine what it would be like if no lives were lost. Colonization has affected all of us. Without it in our history, we wouldn’t be here, on this land, learning about this, in this classroom. Who knows what our world would be like if colonizers hadn’t resorted to destruction before thinking about how it may impact our lives forever.  

Sickness and spread of disease

Some of these diseases were, smallpox, influenza, measles, whooping cough, deadly to many, exposed Indigenous People to things they weren’t used to.

Loss of culture

Culture, ancestry, history, and language, wer a huge part of peoples identity and life, but the residential schools took it away. They forced indigenous people to use only a western worldview, and we are still trying to remember and reclaim the lost culture.

Death

The mass amounts of death by sickness and murder that continues to impact us now. Up to 95% of Indigenous People in Canada were lost to Colonization, only 5% of the indigenous people in canada that used to thrive made it through the period of colonization that lasted from the 15th to mid 20th century.

Craft

https://docs.craft.do/editor/d/4db0ccea-7be6-addf-cf59-5de2b7aea6e0/57490729-9226-464B-B7A5-AA1C5CAE16E3?s=KZ7L3i3wSVKKBVMfUcaQeYbK1C5XQTxgyfVcbHMX7FAX

Becoming a PLP Learner- How am I doing it?

For my fist maker project of the year, we did the ‘Becoming a PLP learner’ project. As I reflect on the project, I feel proud of the work I did, even though I can see many areas I could improve. When I started school in September, I understood the basic used of my iPad, but I have such a better understanding of the tech now. I didn’t even know that you could animate in keynote, or that I could make ‘stickers’ for a Memoji.

My Fidget

The first thing we made was the ‘Keynote Design Notebook’ which was a keynote slideshow that took us through some of the many things we could do within the keynote app.  The thing I was most proud of from the slideshow was the Barbie Squishy fidget I made using the animate tool, shape tool, colour fill tool, and the image fill tool. I chose to make my fidget about Barbies because of my favourite movie; the Barbie Movie.  I love everything about this movie, from the characters, to the storyline. I think that I identify with it much more than the shoe, or the dress- but the hoodie was a close second. One thing that I regret about the fidget is that I did not showcase my favourite character, Ken, as much as I know that I should have. The main attraction was, of course, Barbie, and I am worried that Ken may feel hurt that I chose his bau over him- I would never.

My MeMoji

The next thing that we worked on was our Memoji, and its beautiful be-stickered computer. I chose stickers that meant something to me, like the Ski-wi- skiing kiwi, the feminism sign, and the Kenough quote. I made the stickers similarity to how I made the fidget, with image fill, shapes, gradient,  outline, and of course Memoji. I tried to make the Memoji look as similar to me as possible, and I later added Animation to the Memoji and the stickers when I moved it into the final slideshow.

My WordPack

Another thing we did was the WordPack.  I had the Word pack. I chose the green colour scheme- my favourite colour, and put the words in the shape of a mushroom- just a shape that  drew my attention. I used the WordPack app, and used words like, Lover-of-food, Daughter, and Feminist to create the final product. one thing I could have done better is try to find out how to make the words I want bigger, like Daughter, Lover-of-Food, Feminist, and Sister. Instead I just let the app choose random words that don’t mean a lot to me to hi-light.

 

 

The last thing I have not touched on is the driving question; Who am I as a PLP learner? I am interested, and creative. I am taking in knowledge, and I am curious. I listen,  I talk,  and I am learning every step of the way.