Additional resources include short film clips, posters, discussion guides and more. Go to http://www.letitripple.org/character-day/
Additional resources include short film clips, posters, discussion guides and more. Go to http://www.letitripple.org/character-day/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=3&v=7Ax-Wp7cCwY?rel=0
From the Government of Canada: “June 21 is National Indigenous Peoples Day. This is a day for all Canadians to recognize and celebrate the unique heritage, diverse cultures and outstanding contributions of First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples. The Canadian Constitution recognizes these three groups as Aboriginal peoples, also known as Indigenous peoples.
Although these groups share many similarities, they each have their own distinct heritage, language, cultural practices and spiritual beliefs.
In cooperation with Indigenous organizations, the Government of Canada chose June 21, the summer solstice, for National Aboriginal Day, now known as National Indigenous Peoples Day. For generations, many Indigenous peoples and communities have celebrated their culture and heritage on or near this day due to the significance of the summer solstice as the longest day of the year.”
Additional Resources:
Move, groove and prove that you can make a Motion Commotion this summer when you join FVRL’s 2018 Summer Reading Club. There is a club for everyone! Sign up starts June 21 and continues throughout the summer. Visit your favourite FVRL location to join.

Read To Me (0 to Preschool)Share stories, record reading, collect stickers, win prizes and get a medal. |
Kids (grades K to 6)Ready, set, go! Collect a reading record, enter prize draws, come to fun shows and earn a medal. Just read every day! |
Teens (grades 7 to 12)Read. Record. Repeat. It all begins when you pick up a reading record. There will be lots of chances to win fantastic prizes. |
AdultsGet a move on! Take home a reading record and mark your reading to enter prize draws. The more you read, the more chances to win. There are oh so many ways to make a Motion Commotion when you join 2018 Summer Reading Club! |
This message is from the First Nations Child & Family Caring Society of Canada (FNCFCS) website:
“Have a Heart Day is a child and youth-led reconciliation campaign that brings together caring Canadians to help ensure First Nations children have the services they need to grow up safely at home, get a good education, be healthy, and be proud of who they are.
Watch “End the Gap – Fair Funding For First Nations Schools”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LchiS8eQ7UM?rel=0
Listen to the ideas of children:
Activity Ideas:
Explore the Have a Heart Day website to download Have a Heart Day resources.
Through activities like Have a Heart Day, we are creating a movement where the landscape of Canada is only one of honour and possibility for First Nations children.”
FNCFCS also shared this music video by N’we Jinan Artists “Important to Us”, written and performed by students at Pierre Elliot Trudeau School.
Their message is inspiring:
“No matter where you’re from,
let’s fill our home with colour and love.”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9mJYjUWGS8?rel=0
Teachers: More resources are available here
Mark your calendar: Pink Shirt Day is February 27nd, 2019.
Wear something pink to show that we are all working together to erase bullying in our community.

2019 Focus: Cyberbullying
Watch the clip below. What is kindness to you, to your family and how can you show kindness in your community?
Think about this prompt:
“Kindness is……”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w9a9IqHkpgc?rel=0
Here are some great recommendations for books about kindness. Visit your school library to find even more!


The Riot of Reading Solutions 15th annual Family Literacy Fair is on Saturday, February 3rd from 11 – 3 pm at Ecole Mission Central.

Mission Teacher Librarians will be there and our theme is “Winter Rainy Day Family Activities”. Visit our table to see connecting stories and make a winter/rainy day craft!
Exciting events taking place that day include:

How can you participate in Family Literacy Day? Here are some ideas for inspiration:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0SF5XG1AkA?rel=0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0m4XUOHlp3E?rel=0
Activity Ideas:
Source: ABC Life Literacy Learn at Play, Everyday Activities (English and French)
“Canadians have a proud history of bravely serving in the cause of peace and freedom over the years. A name from Canada’s First World War military heritage that still stirs emotions is “Passchendaele.” On a muddy battlefield in northwest Belgium, Canadians overcame almost unimaginable hardships to win an impressive victory in the fall of 1917.” (Source: Veterans Affairs Canada)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=18&v=lQjU8gqWMSw?rel=0
Link to Indigenous-Canadian Veterans information: (Indigenous Veterans Day is November 8th)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4RrtGg3KnR4?rel=0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n2Z6RSKbrw0?rel=0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c7jla_6CD3A?rel=0
Information about and significance of the National Aboriginal Veterans Monument :
Song: A Pittance of Time
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kX_3y3u5Uo?rel=0
Interactive Activity: (Ages 10+)
Over the Top: An Interactive Adventure
“An activity created by the Canadian War Museum to help students understand the First World War from a soldier’s perspective. The activity’s interactive nature and its animation-based format will appeal to younger students. Includes a glossary of terms. (Recommended for ages 10 and up.)”
Canadian Encyclopedia Articles:
Additional Resources:

Message from the organizers (Mission Arts Council):
This year the Mission Arts Council’s 22nd annual Fraser Valley Children’s Festival is on June 10th, 2018 at Fraser River Heritage Park, from 10:00 am – 4:00 pm. Admission is FREE, and parking is by donation. There will be some food trucks on location, but you’re welcome to bring a picnic lunch.
WE WANT YOU TO HAVE A GOOD TIME AT THE FESTIVAL
1. Dress for the weather Rain or shine, the Festival will go on! Make sure to pack a raincoat or umbrella for a wet day and sunscreen for a sunny day!
2. Be safe and courteous. Don’t forget the buddy system! All children must be accompanied by an adult. Respect the personal space of all performers by ensuring the children are at a safe distance. Roving Performers are people too!
3. Arrive any time between 10 am and 4pm. At our main stage we do have a tight schedule and we try to have all shows start on time. Come early, check out the event and pick the show you want to see. Get your favourite seat, either on the grass or even better bring a lawn chair, sit back, relax and enjoy the show!
4. Plan your day; there is a lot to do and see at the Fraser Valley Children’s Festival. In addition to all of the great Festival shows and activities, you never know what creative fun will happen at the Festival, so leave a little time for the unexpected! In addition to theChildren’s Festival have a walk around the beautiful Fraser River Heritage Park and enjoy the vista’s of the Fraser River and Sumas Mountain.
5. Nourish the soul and your belly Plan to have lunch at the Festival. Our vendors provide good healthy food and yummy treats, or if you like, bring a picnic. There are lots of places on site to sit down and enjoy a lunch!
International Museum Day is on May 18th.
The goal of this day is to raise awareness that “Museums are an important means of cultural exchange, enrichment of cultures and development of mutual understanding, cooperation and peace among peoples.” (International Council of Museums)
Do you have a favourite museum that you like to visit? What is it that you like about the museum?
Here are some virtual museum exhibits that you might like to visit:
Sq’éwlets: A Stó:lō-Coast Salish Community in the Fraser River Valley (available in English and French with Halq̓eméylem) (Creators: The Stó:lō Research and Resource Management Centre)
A Scholar’s Garden (available in English, French and Chinese) (Creator(s): Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden)
Canada Under the Stars (available in English and French) (Creator(s): ASTROLab du Mont-Mégantic)
Video Clips from Canadian Museums:
The Canadian Stamp (Canadian Museum of History)
Nature Scoop Playlist: (Canadian Museum of Nature)
Begins with: Forest and seaside lichen adventure in Kejimkujik
For Teachers:
“On May 18th, through the celebration of International Museum Day, museums around the world will raise awareness of the important role they play in the development of society. Established in 1977 by the International Council of Museums (ICOM), this day reminds us that museums are “an important means of cultural exchange, enrichment of cultures and development of mutual understanding, cooperation and peace among peoples”. *
This month’s resources allow students to think critically about the decisions that museums and historians make. Younger students can begin by examining local historical landmarks and the clues they offer about their community. For older students, considering the rightful ownership of historical artifacts, the naming and dedication of museums and the techniques experts use to detect forgeries will assist them in recognizing and thinking critically about some of the issues museum curators may face.” (Source: The Thinking Teacher, The Critical Thinking Consortium, April 19, 2017.)
Free resources:
| Critical Challenge: Community landmarks have stories to tell [PDF]
Grade range: Primary View more resources in the Critical Challenges collection. |
|
| Critical Challenge: Alberta’s fossil heritage [Web]
Grade range: Intermediate View more resources in the Critical Challenges collection. |
It’s spring and a time of plant growth and development. What’s growing around your school or in your school garden?
Here’s some inspiration – look for these books in your school library:
Winner of First Nation Communities Read:

(Books below are recommended by Adrienne Gear)












Teachers:
Visit the Environmental Learning page on Curriculum Connections for a wealth of planting resources, shared by Dewdney Elementary School.
What’s your school community like?
There are many types of schools around the world. Your school library might have a copy of these books, including this one by Susan Hughes:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xyVEjSVLgY?rel=0
Listen to audio about “If the World Were a Village”. Teachers: Here is a Lesson Guide to use with this book.
Year of the Pig (image shared by UBC)

Learn about the animals in Chinese Zodiac:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=may2s9j4RLk?rel=0
Watch this video produced for Lunar New Year 2015 and learn about some of the Lunar New Year traditions from the UBC community.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-BlaRMNop-o?rel=0
Teacher Resources:
Mark your calendar: Pink Shirt Day is February 22nd, 2017.
Wear something pink to show that we are all working together to erase bullying in our community.
Portraits of Kindness:
Watch the clip below. What is kindness to you, to your family and how can you show kindness in your community?
Think about this prompt:
“Kindness is……”
Here are some great recommendations for books about kindness. Visit your school library to find even more!

Teacher Resources:
Have a Heart Day is on February 14th, 2017
This message is from the First Nations Child & Family Caring Society of Canada (FNCFCS) website:
“Have a Heart Day is a child and youth-led reconciliation campaign that brings together caring Canadians to help ensure First Nations children have the services they need to grow up safely at home, get a good education, be healthy, and be proud of who they are.
Watch “End the Gap – Fair Funding For First Nations Schools”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LchiS8eQ7UM?rel=0
Listen to the ideas of children:
Activity Ideas:
Explore the Have a Heart Day website to download Have a Heart Day resources, and to order bookmarks and buttons! There is also an information sheet entitled “Reconciliation is all of us”.
Through activities like Have a Heart Day, we are creating a movement where the landscape of Canada is only one of honour and possibility for First Nations children.”
FNCFCS also shared this music video by N’we Jinan Artists “Important to Us”, written and performed by students at Pierre Elliot Trudeau School.
Their message is inspiring:
“No matter where you’re from,
let’s fill our home with colour and love.”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9mJYjUWGS8?rel=0
Teachers: More resources are available here

The Riot of Reading Solutions 15th annual Family Literacy Fair is on Saturday, January 28th from 11 – 3 pm at Ecole Mission Central.
The theme for this year’s Family Literacy Day is “Learn at Play, Every Day”.
Exciting events taking place that day include:
How will you participate in Family Literacy Day? Here are some ideas for inspiration:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0SF5XG1AkA?rel=0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0m4XUOHlp3E?rel=0
Activity Ideas:
Source: ABC Life Literacy Learn at Play, Everyday Activities (English and French)

A right delayed is a right denied.
– Martin Luther King Jr.
Shared by TC2 -Thinking Teacher:
“December 10th commemorates the day when the United Nations General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). Translated into almost 500 languages, the UDHR details the fundamental rights of citizens around the world. Each year, we are reminded of our collective responsibility to stand up and defend these rights not only for ourselves, but also on behalf of those who may not be in a position to do so.”
The COVID-19 crisis has been fuelled by deepening poverty, rising inequalities, structural and entrenched discrimination and other gaps in human rights protection. Only measures to close these gaps and advance human rights can ensure we fully recover and build back a world that is better, more resilient, just, and sustainable.
Watch the videos below and think about our responsibilities to ourselves, our families and our communities.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JpY9s1Agbsw?rel=0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yot6n8W8sik?rel=0
For Teachers:
“The resources featured this month will inspire younger students to think critically as active citizens while they examine the concept of fairness as it relates to a situation in a fictional community.”
Free resources:
| Thoughtful Books: Each One Special by Frieda Wishinsky and H. Werner Zimmerman [PDF]
Grade range: Primary View more resources in the Thoughtful Books collection |
From Amnesty International:
“Downloadable activities to accompany the award-winning book ‘We Are All Born Free’ – thirty beautiful illustrations that interpret our human rights for ages 5+.
Illustrators include Axel Scheffler (of Gruffalo fame), Korky Paul and John Burningham. The activities available to download below introduce the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) through creative writing and story-telling.”
We Are All Born Free can be ordered from the Amnesty shop.
‘Amnesty’s delightful book We Are All Born Free explains the importance of human rights through truly beautiful illustrations. It is clear, simple and uplifting and makes it very easy to raise difficult subjects, even with young children. It is a wonderful educational tool and I strongly believe that every school should own a copy.’
Actress and author Emma Thompson
2016 Remembrance Day Resources
Veterans Affairs:
Information about and significance of the National Aboriginal Veterans Monument :
Song: A Pittance of Time
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kX_3y3u5Uo?rel=0
Interactive Activity: (Ages 10+)
Over the Top: An Interactive Adventure
“An activity created by the Canadian War Museum to help students understand the First World War from a soldier’s perspective. The activity’s interactive nature and its animation-based format will appeal to younger students. Includes a glossary of terms. (Recommended for ages 10 and up.)”
Canadian Encyclopedia Articles:

This year’s theme is “Don’t Wait, Check the Date! Replace smoke alarms every ten years.”
Here are some fun ways to learn about fire safety and the importance of smoke detectors:
Teach Fire Safety using resources from the National Fire Protection Association :