EF
Nov 2, 2020
Such important information for us all. This course was eye-opening and should really be taken by every Canadian. The course flows along nicely and is easy to navigate. I am better for having taken it.
MD
Jul 2, 2021
This course was very interesting and very informative. Not only did it help correct stereotypes or prejudices, it showed a wide range of subjects pertaining to global and specific Indigenous cultures.
By Sanatan D G
•Jul 26, 2022
Great course!
By Hannah B
•Mar 25, 2020
Great content
By Tammy S
•Aug 18, 2024
Great course
By Amanda C L
•Oct 10, 2022
interesting
By Chris A
•Apr 27, 2022
great course
By Colin M
•Aug 18, 2018
Informative
By Sunil k
•Sep 10, 2024
goodoneeee
By Michael C
•Aug 23, 2022
Thank you.
By Alice H
•Sep 5, 2020
Very good.
By Lesley B
•Aug 10, 2020
Thank you!
By Kathleen S
•Sep 6, 2022
thank you
By John P S
•Aug 20, 2022
Well done
By Breana P
•Jun 19, 2022
good info
By Michael A O
•Oct 26, 2020
Engaging.
By Mohan
•Jul 17, 2023
its good
By opkweopgkwee k
•Mar 13, 2023
ijiojioj
By Mark V
•Sep 11, 2024
NC
By Janelle G
•Sep 15, 2022
By Melissa K
•Apr 11, 2022
By Dean T
•Dec 13, 2020
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By Ernie G
•Nov 2, 2021
Course was very informative and full of information.
It became a course of how the victim's were exploited and continue to be and how they suffer today, without offering solutions to the problems.
Given today October 2021, with all the news of the atrocities of the Residential Schools, this course would take a graver view of the indigenous peoples position, without offering solutions.
Solutions are what allow errors and mistakes to be dealt with and for societies to move forward. Continuation of the past solves nothing. What can be done to allow the healing to to commence?
I took this course hoping to gain an understanding of what is wrong, at the very beginning of it that information was provided, and throughout the course examples of how indigenous people are treated and segregated was given. What is the solution from the indigenous point of view?
I am very thankful that the indigenous community is gravely concerned about the land and the environment, their stories hold get truths and meanings, this course showed that and reenforced my thoughts.
However what I gather from this is that the indigenous community want to have special compensations and exemptions. In a society it does not work it becomes chaos. Tradition and culture are very important to all, but granting individual groups special exemptions benefits no one. What I got from this course is that indigenous people want exemptions and compensation for past errors. But in what form?
A society must agree to work together as a unit or like paddling a canoe, if both people are not paddling in the same direction nothing is accomplished. Most definitely traditions and culture need to be maintained (the error of residential schools) but we must work together, we must all contribute equally in some manner, much like a marriage we all need to perform the role and tasks of what we are good at.
Thank you for the course I enjoyed the information and knowledge.
By Keith S
•Nov 10, 2020
The course is a good overview but needs some polishing to be great.
Several questions in the quizes were confusing and did not match with the readings. Some quiz questions asked something like "What was THE issue..." but when you looked at the readings there might be two or three issues raised and the answer options included versions of more than one. When you get a quiz question wrong, suggesting that you go back and look things up is not very helpful. A better quiz would have a specific reference (either for the correct answer or for the wrong options) that could then direct the student to the information. This cross linking would also ensure that quiz questions and choices matched with material in the course.
There was no clear way to go back and redo a quiz but it says we can do re-takes.
Some data is wrong, e.g., Calgary Olympics were not in 1986 they were in 1988. I didn't keep track of everything but between grammatical errors and factual errors, I suggest that someone go through the course and make corrections.
I live in Treaty 6 and 7 areas and the course was heavily weighted to Eastern Canada and not particularly strong in Western Canadian experiences.
The sections referencing the case law were probably the strongest pieces of the course in both material and clarity.
By Mark S
•Sep 15, 2021
I enrolled in this course to better understand the history and contemporary issues of Canada's indigenous peoples so that I can be better informed and more supportive. When the course stuck with discussing facts (versus pointed opinions), I felt that I was gaining a greater appreciation of our sad history; I enjoyed the content and I was supportive of what was being discussed.Â
What was truly distracting and irritating was the ongoing victim versus oppressor theme. I can sympathize with that theme -- and I get it -- but to repeat it over and over without offering any ideas on how to move forward is a great disservice to what this course could have been and I was hoping for. I would ask how you expect a person that voluntarily devotes the time and to learn to feel welcome when I am referred to as a settler, a colonialist, a racist, a misogynist, a paternalist, a heteropatriarch, a capitalist, a subsummator, and a genocidal instrument over and over throughout the classes?Â
Sadder still is that over the twelve sections very little was conveyed in terms of how WE can move forward in the future to make our country a better place to live for ALL of us. Maybe that's irrelevant to a primer course?
By Dylan A
•Jan 25, 2022
I thought this course covered most of the key takeaways from Canadian Indigenous History, however, it was very disappointing that significant figures (e.g., Chief Tecumseh) were very minimally mentioned throughout the modules; this is really important history and deserves to be included in the course. In turn, adding these components to the course would've definitely made it more interesting to learn. Finally, I think this course tried way too hard to attempt to establish a real-world social connection in an online environment. For instance, the instructors are constantly making the same hand gestures every few seconds and it is very noticeable, hard to watch, and is obvious that they were informed to do so. I also think that some points are highlighted in the videos that are just part of ordinary conversation and do not actually hold any particular significance on its own and as such, they shouldn't be emphasized over everything else. I noticed this a few times throughout the course. In sum, however, I think the course was well-structured and would be a great learning opportunity for those that have never learned about Indigenous History in their past.