cultural geography activities

  • Receive alerts:
  • by e-mail
    Your information will be added to a database with the sole purpose of serving your subscription. This database is the exclusive property of vLex Networks S.L. and will never be shared with any other company. By sending your request you accept the Data Protection Policy of vLex Networks S.L.
  • via RSS
164 documents for cultural geography activities
  • ... to different levels: personal, local, cultural, national, and regional, and exists both within an... on culture, language, ethnicity, and geography (see Grant 1989; Grace 2001; Hulan 2002; Griffiths... building knowledge about circumpolar activities and communities. The importance of scientific rese...

  • ...* Atmospheric Sciences * (BSc, MSc, PhD) Geography-various programs (BA, BSc, MA, MSc, PhD) * Biogeog... national average and in Quesnel is built cultural issues of 11 out of 13 research to LEED gold stand... with many of the committed to being an activities with required courses environmentally professors o...

  • ... is more strategic now is the wide use of cultural urban policies in order to attract and retain inve...Urban Geography 14: 99-107. . Bunce, S. 2004. The emergence of 'sm...

  • With more than 27,000 Aboriginal children currently in provincial care, solving the issues surrounding Aboriginal adoptions has never been more important. These issues include: the inequality of funding between the First Nations Child Welfare agencies and provincial agencies (which has instigated a Canadian Human Rights Complaint by the Assembly of First Nations and the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada), the denial of Aboriginal Identity from Aboriginal adoptees, and the lack of recognition of Aboriginal custom adoptions. This paper focuses on these issues, discusses Supreme Court jurisprudence, as well as how Aboriginal adoptions are currently being dealt with in the provinces of Saskatchewan and British Columbia.

    ... 'economic' leaning, as opposed to a 'cultural' leaning, in the best interests of the child analy... and community,34 as well as from geography, language, and other social factors.35 Within this... aboriginal children to participate in activities related to their culture, language, religion, and ...

  • ...." With anticipated increased human activities throughout the Arctic, Ottawa's discourse for the ...--or a "major" Arctic power by virtue of geography (20)--that influences "the international community... people have, as sets of socio-cultural resources used by people in the construction of me...

  • ... characteristics of Canadian social and cultural history;. (c) the chief characteristics of Canadiaan physical and political geography;. (d) the chief characteristics of the Canadian sy... the citizenship test are key initial activities of the Citizenship Action Plan (CAP). The goal of ...

  • ... automotive access between dispersed activities; depleted core areas; and a sense of place that ce...: University of Waterloo, Department of Geography Publication Series No. 47. . Demont, J. 1995. The ...Simard. 2005. Towards a culturalist city: A planning agenda for peripheral mid-size ci...

  • ... restricted to the right to engage in activities which are aspects of aboriginal practices, customs..., archeology, anthropology, and geography. 6 The trial judge's decision (reported at [1991] ... and enhance their social, political, cultural, linguistic and spiritual identity. 66 Finally, La...

  • This paper argues that states have undergone a shift in how they see and respond to human smuggling. They are now less bound by those land borders that once demarcated the edges of sovereign territory and act more transnationally in response to the transnational practices of human smugglers. The interception of four cargo boats carrying migrants smuggled from Fujian, China, serves as a case study. Central to understanding the struggle between smugglers and States are geography and vision: how each sees the landscape, plays on distance and proximity, and puts geography to work. After explaining the methodology, I locate Canada in the global industries of human smuggling and border enforcement, outline changes to border enforcement that have taken place in the time since these interceptio...

    ... foreign and domestic spaces and activities. Smugglers and their clients are tied to multiple ... this text, as well as a series of cultural symbols. Like the text and photographic images, th...

  • In this article, we make a case for the importance of oral narrative in Aboriginal children's (i.e., First Nations, Métis, and Inuit) literacy instruction. In particular, we argue that oral narrative or storytelling fits with Aboriginal epistemology-the nature of their knowledge, its foundations, scope, and validity. Moreover, storytelling is a traditional Aboriginal teaching tool and, as such, is familiar and culturally relevant to the children. We begin by reviewing a representative sample of the research that has examined the outcomes of early literacy instruction with Aboriginal children, documenting successes and challenges. Next, we describe Aboriginal epistemology, highlighting the role of the oral tradition. Because of the paucity of empirical peer reviewed studies conducted wit...

    ... and researchers must recognise that geography, history, and language played a significant role i... were integrated in the instruction activities: Following Vygotskian theory (Vygotsky, 1978), we ...



Loading

ver las páginas en versión mobile | web

ver las páginas en versión mobile | web

© Copyright 2012, vLex. All Rights Reserved.

Contents in vLex Canada

Explore vLex

For Professionals

For Partners

Company