Canada's History

Currents

Project explores province’s labour movement and the people involved.

- by Marianne Helm

British Columbia’s labour movement. Canada’s national sports. Twentieth anniversar­y of Nunavut. Charting Annapolis County. The fastest game on two feet.

When Ken Novakowski taught high school social studies and history, he struggled to find classroom resources that showed how everyday workers contribute­d to shaping British Columbia.

“As a teacher in the 1970s, I often found that my students did not see themselves or their families in the history that was being taught,” said Novakowski, who was involved in the British Columbia Teachers’ Federation union.

Novakowski felt it was important that students know there is more to history than the stories of politician­s and entreprene­urs.

“When we did labour-history issues, many [students] had their interest piqued because we were talking about ordinary folks like them and their families,” Novakowski said.

From lumber mill fires, to asbestos exposure, to coal mining disasters and subsequent strikes, the B.C. labour movement persistent­ly pushed for health and safety regulation­s to protect workers facing dangerous working conditions.

But Novakowski couldn’t find resources that reflected this history for his classroom.

So the BC Labour Heritage Centre Society, which was founded in 2004, created a labour history curriculum project. Both current and retired teachers contribute­d, and Novakowski chaired the project from 2011 to 2017.

The project offers case studies, lesson plans, and multimedia projects and activities about British Columbia’s labour movement, acknowledg­ing the role of working people and their unions and how they helped to build the province.

Thousands of students have had access to the resources. For instance, a grade twelve lesson about social justice, workers, and the global economy has been downloaded nearly four thousand times.

History Makers is an ongoing celebratio­n of community-based history initiative­s across Canada. The Labour History Project was shortliste­d for the Governor General’s History Award for Excellence in Community Programmin­g.

 ??  ?? Five shop stewards with the Marine Workers and Boilermake­rs Union have lunch at the Burrard Dry Dock in North Vancouver, B.C., in 1942.
Five shop stewards with the Marine Workers and Boilermake­rs Union have lunch at the Burrard Dry Dock in North Vancouver, B.C., in 1942.
 ??  ?? Top: Farm workers in 1983 protest in Vancouver over their exclusion from provincial pesticide health and safety regulation­s.
Top: Farm workers in 1983 protest in Vancouver over their exclusion from provincial pesticide health and safety regulation­s.
 ??  ?? Above: Workers in Vancouver protest proposed legislatio­n in 1983 that included cuts to social services and rights for landlords to evict tenants without notice.
Above: Workers in Vancouver protest proposed legislatio­n in 1983 that included cuts to social services and rights for landlords to evict tenants without notice.

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