Residential Schools

Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group

 

  • I remember speaking it a few times. And yeah, I did get punished. I got physically abused for that, physically.

Means: Whenever they broke any rules they got punished with mostly severe bodily harm and violence

  • I started getting sexually abused from this guy named George Mazinsky

Means: The people who worked for the schools, like teachers or supervisors could sexually abuse or beat the children whenever they wanted to, which caused the children to suffer from severe physical pain, and some of them still suffer from mental pain those abuses caused.

 

Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group

  • I remember speaking it a few times. And yeah, I did get punished. I got physically abused for that, physically.

Means: Whenever they spoke their own language, they got punished (mostly beaten), so they would get rid of their own culture and adapt to the European culture.

  • We had to pray. At that time I knew about the Creator, but in their ways it was different. Everybody was talking about hell and I didn’t even know what was hell, and the devil and all this, and that we were heathens and all this. They say that everybody had sin.

Means: They made the children believe European religion, even though the children did not want to and mostly did not even know what they were talking about.

Battle of Seven Oaks

  • Causes

– political and technological changes increased poverty and hardships for families

-Hudson´s Bay Company extended their region into Northwest Company territory

-The fourth Earl of Selkirk wanted to settle three groups on his lands in British North America who would take lots of land

-Selkirk settlers are going hungry

-MacDonnell created the Pemmican Proclamation that does not allow people to sell pemmican outside the colony- makes buffalo running illegal

-NWC and Metis threaten and harass colonists (stole lifestock and tools, burn crops and houses

 

  • Components

-NWC stole Pemmican from HBC

-NWC take over forts

-HBC sends Robert Semple to find the Pemmican thieves

-Semple (force of 21 men) meets Cuthbert Grant (Metis)- 65

-no one know who shot first

-Grant and the Metis win

-15 minute battle

 

  • Consequences

-colonists leave

-Selkirk takes over NWC forts and arrests employees

-Metis now believe that the English had no regard for Metis way of life

-Britain now sees the Metis as savages who need to be civilized

-conflict with two economic systems- Metis will want the Buffalo hunt and the British want agriculture

Battle of Seven Oaks

 

The picture above shows the Battle of Seven Oaks, where Metis and the English for about fifteen minutes, at Seven Oaks, North of Winnipeg. All that resulted from a number of causes that mostly were connected to the competition between HBC and NWC. The first one of those reasons was that the Hudson´s Bay company ran out of beaver population so they extended their region into the NWC region, which was the first conflict. Also settlers in Selkirk were going hungry due to the Pemmican law and being not allowed to do buffalo running anymore. When the HBC sends Robert Semple to find the Pemmican thieves, he and his delegation, which includes 21 men, run into a group of Metis, which included 65 men and they started fighting. Nobody really knows who shot first, but we do know the battle only lasted for about 15 minutes, which was a very short battle compared to other fights on history. In the picture the Metis are charging at the English, so the picture definitely shows and supports the British perspective, since the British depicted the Metis as savages. The Metis won the battle, so there were some consequences for both the British and Metis. Their image of each other got supported, the Metis were convinced that the British did not have any regards of the Metis lifestyle. The British were even more convinced that the Metis were savages that they had to deal with and that had to be civilized. The battle also created a new conflict, this time it was an economic one: The British wanted an agricultural based economy, while the Metis wanted a Buffalo hunt based economy.

Confederation Conferences

Charlottetown

 

It is September 6, 1864 and we are here in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, where Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edwards Island´s delegates came together to discuss the idea of building a maritime union. This meeting would not have happened if the legislatives of the colony of Canada heard of the idea and asked to be allowed to attend the meeting. The official part of the meeting began on September 1, and they are still going on, and there is no end in sight yet! We cannot really get any record of what is said in the discussion, but we can assume they are debating the financial aspects, the form the government would take and the benefits for the union. We can also observe that it is not all about business here, the delegates socialize and get a sense for common interests and living together while going to the famous Champagne dinner or the first big circus that takes place for the first time in this city. Also, they are visiting the seaside by boat and some of the delegates home, so personally they seem to get along very well, which might affect their final decision in the discussion. This is it from the meeting here in Charlottetown, but we are also going to look at the upcoming meetings in Halifax, Saint John and Fredericton.

 

 

Math 10 Week Blogpost Patterns

Patterns make it easier to calculate or find values. A pattern is generally something that we can memorize because it  always works the same way. If there is the number 11 multiplied by 2, we get 22. The same number multiplied by 3 gives us 33.  That  pattern that stays the same for all numbers from 1 to 9 mulitplied with 11, so since we know that, whenever we have to multiply the number 11 we remember that pattern and don´t have to do all the math in our head, which saves work and time. Just when 11 is multiplied with number higher than 9, the pattern changes. There is still a pattern, it just changes a little bit.

 

IMG_3398 Kopie

 

Patterns also help us to deal with Binomials, since the way and order we solve them are always the same, even if the numbers are different. There are three different kinds of binomials, so the patterns make it way easier to solve them is less time and more efficiently once we know what kinds of binomials there are and how to use the patterns on them.

 

To make those patterns more visual, we use algebra tiles in which we can see how the factors relate to each other in a rectangle.

 

at

 

This is a really good example of an algebra tile, using the equation (x+2)(x+3). x+2 and x+3 are the sides of the rectangle, so in the diagram the sides are composed of at least 2 parts, one of which is the x, that is equal on both sides and is colored in green. Then there is the amount of smaller squares, according to how often the variable x is in the formula, in this case it is 2 and 3, which are colored in yellow. Now we extend those  lines into the rectangle, so we get many little fields inside the rectangle that represent the product of the sides. The big blue box is x^2, the smaller green fields add up to 5x and the small yellow fields represent 2*3, which is 6. If we draw the diagram properly, the amount of fields inside the rectangle will be equal to the numbers on the outside, so then we just need to count them, add them to one equation and that takes a little more time, but it prevents mistakes.

 

But also without algebra tiles there are patterns that help us to solve not only binomials, but almost for every kind of equation there are certain similarities that allow us to find patterns. The best example for this is again binomials because there the ways we solve them never change, as long as we memorize the patterns and pay attention to positive and negative values.

 

bino

 

In example a in the picture we see the binomial (x+3)(x+5), which is the first of the three binomials and the easiest one, because it has all positive values and we don’t have to worry about making mistakes there. No what we do is we multiply all the terms inside both brackets with each other, so here are all the multiplications happening in the binomial (x+3)(x+5):

 

x*x

x*3

x*5

3*5

which gives us

x^2 + 3x+5x + 15

which can be summarized to

 

x^2 + 8x+ 15

This way of solving type 1 binomials will never change, even if there is (x+100)(x+37), or any other values, which will eventually make it more difficult as the numbers get bigger.

 

Now the second and third type of binomials are different, because they have positive and negative values in them. The second type is the most difficult one because there is a negative value in both brackets so there might be mistakes happening. The third type, where one bracket is all positive and the other one has a negative value has the most significant pattern of the three:

 

(x+3)(x-3)

which gives us

x^2 – 9

because +3x-3x cancel each other out and that leaves us x^2 -9.

 

This pattern will only work as long as the number values in the brackets are the same, it would not work in for example:

 

(x+3)(x-2)

 

Here they do subtract each other but it leaves 1x because one number is bigger than the other

 

 

 

Binomials is always about multiplying brackets. For the pattern that I described in this post it does not matter how often we do that. If it is only twice, or five times that we multiply the bracket with itself, does´t change the pattern, it may just look a little bit more complicated because the equation gets longer, but we still distribute all the factors with each other.

bino 2

 

 

 

Those were only a few examples of patterns in math, but there is a lot more that we either commonly use or haven´t learned yet, and also some people have different patterns that they find convenient for themselves, so we do by far not know all of them yet. The ones that we do know save us a lot of time and work and prevent mistakes which is why we pay attention to them in math class.

 

 

 

American Civil War

  1. Summarize the following: American Civil War (Trent Affair as well as St. Albans). Manifest Destiny, Fenian Raids, Britain´s feelings about the BNA colonies.

American Civil War:

Between 1861 and 1865 several southern American states formed the Confederate States of America. The government saw that as an attempted rebellion. For control of political and economical decision making the southern states fought a brutal war against the northern states. The northern states won that war, but the consequences of that war reached far more than just the states inside America. the South, who provided Cotton for the British textile industry, blocked ships from leaving to cut the British off the Cotton supplies. The British build so called blockade runners, which were small, fast ships that could snuggle through the blockade and get the Cotton from the Southern States.

 

The trent affair: The United States stopped a British mail ship with two national agents on board and took the agents as prisoners, even though they were in neutral water. Resulting from that the British sent 14000 troops to British North America, what took the a long time because there was no railway and threatened to attack. In the end they never actually did attack.

 

St. Albans Raid: Confederate soldiers attacked the town St. Albans in Vermont and used Montreal as their base. Because they did not wanna get put into prison they escaped back across the border to the United States.

 

 

Manifest Destiny: American Believe that one day they should rule all of North America.

 

 

Fenian Raids: A group of Irish people formed a group called „the Fenians“, whose target it was to free the Irish from British control. Their strategy was to capture British North American colonies and trade them back for Irish freedom. They tried attacks in East and West Canada, but they only killed a few Canadians and then were forced back across the border. Those attacks got the British North American Colonies to believe they needed a common defense against possible future raids.

 

 

Why did the rebellion 1837 fail?

On the first page the author said that they had to organize themselves, so they were not really organized or coordinated.

In line 13 on the second page he said they had rifles and guns of various kinds and some of them were old, so their equipment was not really good. Also eventually some of their rifles might not be effective and that could make them easier to attack. Just after that, in line 14/15 he said when they had to reload their guns, they did not „step aside to make from for those behind“, but stayed where they were so those behind them who were ready to fire could not shoot because their teammates were in the way. In the same lines he says their coordination was that bad that they could more likely die from one of their teammate´s guns than an enemy´s gun.

 

Later, on page 3 he says that people who heard the firing and saw people fall to the ground ran away as fast as they could, so even their own people and possible support ran away and left the warriors behind.

Underground Railroad: Consequences- Life in Windsor

David Cooper

A North-Side View of Slavery. The Refugee, or The Narratives of Fugitive Slaves in Canada, Related by Themselves: With an Account of the History and condition of the Colored Population of Upper Canada. by Drew, Benjamin

Page 334-335

“ A part of them can principally support themselves on what they have cleared, but they have to work out to keep their families supplied.“

They are now their own masters. Before, when they were slaves, their masters told them what to do and made sure they do not starve to death. Now, there is nobody telling them what to do, so they have to learn everything by themselves, but they can decide what they want to use their land, their ow property for. It might be hard, and they might have to do something else to get enough food to live on, but they were not beat and whipped anymore.

 

„…, and sold to any colored men who were disposed to buy.“

Former slaves were allowed to have property. With the little money they had they could buy property and start a farm and build a house, so they were not owned by anyone else, they owned their own property. With that property they could do whatever they wanted, so whatever was good for their families and brought enough food. If they were able to grow enough they could even trade it and make more money.

Math 10- Week 5

  1. My ah-ha moment this week was today when we did the skills check on converting units. Converting units was always confusing for me because i kept messing the units up. But at home I practiced the factor label method, which helps me find the right numbers and units. I had to use it on the sills check so I learned how to adapt it to what we learned before.

Ahha moment math week 5