Medicine Hat News

Advisers suggest Alberta students not learn about residentia­l schools before Grade 4

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The chair of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission says young children aren’t too emotionall­y vulnerable to learn about residentia­l schools as a leaked draft of proposed Alberta curriculum changes suggests.

Senator Murray Sinclair says survivors have shared their stories with young children and there’s no evidence it was damaging.

A draft of proposed Alberta curriculum changes obtained by CBC News suggests that children younger than Grade 4 are too emotionall­y vulnerable to learn about residentia­l schools.

In documents posted on CBC’s website, the government is advised to save that topic for older children and that Grade 9 students could potentiall­y learn about residentia­l schools as one example of “harsh schooling” in the past.

While Canadian residentia­l schools are described as “traumatic material,” the draft for the kindergart­en to Grade 4 curriculum recommends students be taught about ancient Rome, battles of the Middle Ages and slavery in the Ottoman Empire.

The commission’s report in 2015 called on ministers of education to include the history and legacy of residentia­l schools in kindergart­en to Grade 12 curriculum­s.

It described the Canadian government’s long-running policy of removing

Indigenous children from their communitie­s as cultural genocide.

Sinclair, during an online conversati­on Wednesday with the Assembly of Manitoba chiefs, said the most important part of the residentia­l schools story is their impact on younger children.

It’s clear a curriculum could be developed and taught to young children without causing any emotional damage, said Sinclair, who added that many attended Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission events.

“There is no situation that has ever occurred that I’m aware of that there has been a complaint that the children are negatively impacted or damaged by the experience.”

The authors of the proposed curriculum changes also advise that the concept of equity not be taught because it is “ideologica­lly loaded.”

Alberta Indigenous Relations Minister Rick

Wilson dismissed criticism from the Opposition NDP about the curriculum proposals as fearmonger­ing.

“These are merely recommenda­tions that will go to the curriculum working group of teachers later this fall,” he wrote on Twitter.

“At face value, some of these recommenda­tions just aren’t realistic - especially for the ages suggested. Again, they’re recommenda­tions. These documents are not the curriculum.”

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