Looking at 150 years of Canada

It’s July, and Canada is officially 150 years old. This month’s seasonal display is all about Canada – showcasing both books that celebrate Canada as a country as well as books that look critically at Canada.

Canadian history is a required subject of study in Ontario schools. But Canadian history is not limited to grade school textbooks! Settling and Unsettling Memories: Essays in Canadian Public History explores ideas of collective memory and discusses the ways in which Canadians interact with our history. Placing Memory and Remembering Place in Canada also looks at collective memory, exploring the ways in which geography and identity intersect. Critical Inquiries: A Reader in Studies of Canada, meanwhile, addresses colonialism in Canada – focusing on Canada’s colonial present, rather than framing colonialism as a past state.

For those of you following the #Resistance150 hashtag, the OISE Library collection contains many books about Indigenous issues and Indigenous resistance. Unsettling the Settler Within: Indian Residential Schools, Truth Telling, and Reconciliation in Canada and From Treaty Peoples to Treaty Nation: A Road Map for All Canadians both address Canada’s colonial history and make recommendations about how Canadians must move forward in their relationship with Canada’s Indigenous peoples. Both books further argue that moving forward will require a fundamental paradigm shift on the part of Canadian institutions. For a survey of Ontario treaties in particular, check out Nation to Nation: A Resource on Treaties in Ontario. In Indigenous Writes: A Guide to First Nations, Métis & Inuit Issues in Canada, Chelsea Vowel discusses a wide array of concepts associated with the relationship between Indigenous peoples and Canada, including a section that breaks down a number of pervasive myths.  Strength and Struggle: Perspectives from First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Peoples in Canada, meanwhile, contains a wide array of short stories, essays, artwork, and other creative pieces that provide insight into what it means to be Indigenous in Canada. Younger readers might be interested in Red Power, a graphic novel with a story of Indigenous resistance. For a look at resistance in a more general context, check out Youth Resistance Research and Theories of Change.

Studying civics and citizenship encourages students to make a difference in their communities. Civics is part of the grade 10 curriculum here in Ontario, which means we’ve got copies of approved textbooks available for use. One such textbook in the OISE Library collection is Civic in Action: In Your Communities, Across Canada, and Globally. For elementary school classes, Citizens and Government in Canada is an excellent resource about civics.

We’ve also got a selection of books for kids on display! ABC of Canada, Canada All Year and Goodnight, Canada are charming picture books that will capture the interest of our youngest readers. From our junior fiction collection, check out Red River Rising and Red Wolf – and for readers interested in stories about real people, Piece by Piece: Stories About Fitting Into Canada is an anthology of fourteen stories from writers who have immigrated to Canada. We’ve got a couple of books about Canada Day on display as well! You may also find Canada: The People to be a useful introductory resource.

These books can be found in the glass display case on the ground floor of the OISE Library. All of these books are available to be checked out – please speak to staff at the circulation and reference desks if you need any assistance.

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Featured Activity Kit – The Very Hungry Caterpillar: Storytelling Set

A classic work of children’s literature,  The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle, first published in 1969, is beloved by children, parents, and teachers alike. The Very Hungry Caterpillar: Storytelling Set allows educators to bring the picture book to life with colourful props and a puppet. The set’s caterpillar puppet transforms easily, from caterpillar to cocoon to butterfly. The props feature the snacks the caterpillar famously munches his way through, ranging from an apple to a cupcake. Additionally, the storytelling set contains a green felt board for displaying the props while reading aloud. The 17-piece set is surface-washable and appropriate for children aged two and up.

The Very Hungry Caterpillar: Storytelling Set can be used with primary and kindergarten students across diverse curriculum areas. The story could be used to teach kindergarten students about the days of the week, as the caterpillar eats his way from Sunday to Saturday. The caterpillar’s metamorphosis into a butterfly lends itself to science curriculum connections, helping students understand animal life cycles. Teachers and teacher candidates wanting to have students create art inspired by The Very Hungry Caterpillar and Eric Carle might be interested in tutorials created by Eric Carle himself, such as  “How I create my pictures” and “How I paint my tissue papers”.

The Very Hungry Caterpillar is an internationally beloved story and the OISE Library has editions of the picture book in a variety of languages. Our Children’s Literature collection features a French translation of The Very Hungry Caterpillar, or rather La chenille qui fait des trous. Additionally, the library has an array of dual-language editions of The Very Hungry Caterpillar in Spanish, ChineseUrdu, Vietnamese, and Somali.

The Very Hungry Caterpillar: Storytelling Set is currently on display on the ground floor of the OISE Library next to the service desk. Stop by and experience Eric Carle’s classic story in a whole new way.

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OISE Library in the Internet Archive

Did you know more than 2,000 books and periodicals from the OISE Library have been digitized and are available through the Internet Archive? The Internet Archive, established in 1996, houses digital copies of more than 19 million books, audio recordings, videos, and images. Materials digitized from the OISE Library collections would be of particular interest to students and scholars doing research on education, both historical and contemporary. One of the most popular items in the OISE Library Internet Archive collection is The Child and the Curriculum by John Dewey, which has been viewed almost 16,000 times. Take some time to search the OISE/UT Library Collection on the Internet Archive and let us know what you uncover.

The OISE Library has been featuring items digitized on the Internet Archive on our Twitter account. Follow us on Twitter to keep up to date with digitized gems, library services, events, and collections.

 

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Closed for the Canada Day weekend

The OISE Library will be closed Saturday July 1st, Sunday July 2nd, and Monday July 3rd for the Canada Day weekend. We will reopen Tuesday July 4th at 8:30am.

Wishing you a wonderful long weekend!

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Pride Month Seasonal Display

This month’s seasonal display is a celebration of Pride Month and the LGBTQ2S community. The OISE Library collections include materials which discuss LGBTQ2S issues both historic and contemporary. Additionally our Children’s Literature Collection contains books with LGBTQ2S themes appropriate for a wide variety of reading levels. Get the Pride Month party started by picking up one of these thought provoking reads.

Our Stacks and Curriculum Resource Collections feature a number of titles which focus on the experiences of LGBTQ2S students and teachers. Trans* in College: Transgender Students’ Strategies for Navigating Campus Life and the Institutional Politics of Inclusion by Z Nicolazzo is based on interviews with nine transgender college students, examining the realities of being trans in the classroom and on campus. Queer Girls in Class: Lesbian Teachers and Students edited by Lori Horvitz is a collection of personal stories written by queer women drawing on their perspectives as both students and educators. The collection touches on both personal experiences with homophobia and pedagogical techniques the writers have used to address discrimination and ignorance. “Don’t be so Gay!”: Queers, Bullying, and Making Schools Safe by Donn Short features interviews with queer youth in Toronto drawing on their personal stories of homophobic bullying to assess the effectiveness of existing safe-schools policies and legislation.

Looking to celebrate Pride Month with a story? The Children’s Literature Collection has materials ranging from graphic novels and picture books to novels and short story collections with with LGBTQ2S themes. Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Sáenz is a Stonewall Book Award winning young adult novel. A coming of age story which focuses on two Mexican-American teens, Ari and Dante, following them as they deal with friendship, sexuality, and love. Love is Love: A Comic Book Anthology to Benefit the Survivors of the Orlando Pulse Shooting is a collection of comics focused on mourning the victims of the Orlando Pulse nightclub shooting and celebrating the strength and resilience of the LGBTQ2S community. The collection features short 1-2 page comics with art and words contributed by more than 30 creators.  Wrist by Nathan Adler is a monster story with a plot spanning over a hundred years. In addition to its century-spanning narrative,  the story features a two-spirit character. Author Nathan Adler is also contributor to Love Beyond Body, Space, and Time,  another anthology featured in our Pride Month display. Love Beyond Body, Space, and Time, edited by Hope Nicholson, collects science fiction and fantasy stories by Indigenous writers, with all of the stories featuring LGBTQ and/or two-spirit characters.

There are a number of books focusing on LGBTQ2S history from our Stacks and Curriculum Resource Collections. Branded by the Pink Triangle by Ken Setterington deals with gay men’s persecution and imprisonment under the Nazis. Writing for a teen audience, Setterington examines the tragic history of the pink triangle symbol. Awfully Devoted Women: Lesbian Lives in Canada, 1900-65 by Cameron Duder draws on letters and journals to tell the stories of Canadian lesbian and bisexual women prior to the rise of second-wave feminism. And They were Wonderful Teachers: Florida’s Purge of Gay and Lesbian Teachers by Karen L. Graves studies the period from 1956 to 1965 when teachers in Florida were subject to investigation and firing on the basis of their sexuality.

The display case on the Ground Floor of the OISE Library features these books and many more Pride Month related works. All items included in the display are available to be checked out, speak to staff at the library service desk if you need any assistance.

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