Stó:lō Cultural Education

Longhouse Extension Program

In response to the Provincial Schools' need to provide a unit on First Nations within their curriculum, Stó:lō Nation has developed their program for Grade 3 students in cooperation with the local School Districts.

The students will see the following stations set up in the Coqualeetza Longhouse:

  •     Bannock making
  •     Carving
  •     Weaving
  •     Drum making
  •     Cedar bark
  •     Language
  •     Slahal game
  •     Dancing
  •     Cedar root baskets
  •     Beading

The Longhouse Extension Program was established to provide a local space where teachers and students can experience aspects of the Stó:lō way of life, philosophy and culture first-hand, as well as participate in hands-on programming designed to supplement the written curricula.

Stó:lō artists and crafts people create original objects and replica pieces onsite for exhibit. This allows visitors an opportunity to watch these artists in action which will foster an understanding and strengthening of the Stó:lō culture in our community.

For more information, please contact June.Point@stolonation.bc.ca

 

Cultural Education Videos and Resources
The SRRMC is pleased to provide cultural education services, videos, and other resources through partnership agreements with school districts.  Currently, staff in the Chilliwack and Abbotsford School Districts may access our online resources. 

For the password, please contact:
               Chilliwack School District – Brenda_Point@sd33.bc.ca
               Abbotsford School District – Darlene.MacDonald@abbyschools.ca

https://download.stolonation.bc.ca/%2F5FHYZtgs


 

Stó:lō Shxwelí Halq'eméylem Language Program

Background

Currently the Halq'eméylem language is very close to extinction.  There are probably less than 5 fluent speakers of our Upriver dialect left, all of them of an advanced age (seventies or eighties and nineties), and several speakers are lost each year.  No program, for this or any of the other dialects has yet succeeded in producing fluent speakers in younger generations, Stó:lō

Shxweli has offered the FIRST every DSTC and since then we’ve successfully had 8 people graduate with their DSTC and a few of them have successfully gone onto their BA in Education or general studies. We still to date have not successfully reached fluency but the instructors who have completed their studies know enough of the language that they can instruct class and hold a very thorough conversation with a fluent speaking elder.

Halq'eméylem is a crucial part of the cultural heritage of the Stó:lō people, and forms an important part of their identity.   Every time a Stó:lō child sees a professional-looking book about their language, or gets to attend a class where the language is taught, or gets to sit with elders and learn about the language, that child is getting a message.


For an awfully long time, by the deliberate attempt to eradicate the language, children and adults were given exactly the opposite message.  And it is no exaggeration to say that the denigration of the language and culture destroyed people's lives.  Stó:lō Nation’s work is only one part, but it is an important part of giving the members of the Stó:lō community the right message again, and of re-building our spirit.  We should also point out that this work is something that the community really wants: We have never been able to accommodate the demand for materials and classes in the community.

Our Vision and Mission

To ensure the future of Halq'eméylem language, we strive for oral and written fluency in all dialects, to create an atmosphere where Halq'eméylem is the first language spoken in our homes. We will also ensure the integrity of the Stó:lō worldview by creating places where Elders can come together to share the language and our teachings with each other and with our children.

In respect of Xá:ls who created and made the world right, we will teach our Halq'eméylem language through our Elders, to present and future generations.

About the Program

Stó:lō Shxweli holds many classes in the Halq'eméylem Language as well as the first ever DSTC course in all of BC. The courses required will provide First Nations language and culture teachers with detailed education in: First Nations or Aboriginal Languages spoken in BC; First Nations Studies or culture; The BC College of Teachers’ academic prerequisites; and Professional development.

The program also encourages the preservation and maintenance of a First Nation language and culture.  The Education Division of the Community Economic Development Department of Stó:lō Nation administers the Stó:lō Shxweli Halq’eméylem Language program.

Stó:lō Shxweli has a great working relationship with the University College of the Fraser Valley & Simon Fraser University education department and NVIT Nicola Valley Institute of Technology, Merritt and Burnaby.   Partners remain committed to an approach which provides the highest potential for success student’s views and prior knowledge about First Nations Language and Culture in order to create a comfortable environment for learning.

Stó:lō Nation holds the Language Authority for the Halq'eméylem language.  The Lalems Ye Selyolexwe, House of Elders, of Stó:lō Nation is the Language Authority.  The Stó:lō Shxweli Halq'eméylem Language Program, under the Stó:lō Nation Education Division, coordinates activities related to Halq'eméylem language for Stó:lō Nation.

The Stó:lō Halq'eméylem Language Authority may recommend individuals to the BCCT for an interim language-teaching certificate.  The Stó:lō Nation Stó:lō Shxweli Program has already partnered with Secwepemc Cultural Education Society to offer the Halq'eméylem Language Proficiency Certificate program and the Halq'eméylem mentorship course.

Stó:lō Shxweli has done much work with the FirstVoices and we have a great deal of information up on their webpage, should you require words for translation please feel free to visit the webpage. See also our Courses and Materials page for other materials available for purchase at Stó:lō Shxweli.

Courses

Halq'eméylem Language courses we have available are at UFV and NVIT, if you are interested in taking the Halq'eméylem classes you MUST register with the University of Fraser Valley or NVIT as soon as possible. As well we have online courses available with NVIT, you can register for these classes. If you are interested in registering for the linguistics classes you must register with SFU for these classes, and you must register as soon as possible. All the above noted classes are pending registration. If we do not get enough people registered into the classes we will NOT offer the classes.

Materials

We offer a variety of books with CD-ROMs for sale to help you better learn and understand the Halq'eméylem language.

For more information, please visit the Stó:lō Gift Shop.

Program History

In 1994, the Stó:lō Shxweli Halq'eméylem Language Program had its modest beginnings.  A group of twenty (20) Stó:lō community people were brought together for the purpose of learning Halq'eméylem to become teachers of the language.  Their aim was to learn Halq'eméylem, learn to become teachers, and to develop curriculum in a short six months.  The Program had ambitious goals, and started a movement in the Stó:lō community for some serious language revival activity.  As a result of the early beginnings:

Four levels of Halq'eméylem Language courses were established to be taught to adults, including curriculum and teachers' guides; Teaching resources for the courses were developed, i.e. tapes, games, charts, other; Students who completed levels III and IV were able to become teachers of the lower levels; Some of the participants graduated from the Native Adult Instructors Diploma (NAID) and Provincial Instructors Diploma (PID), and other courses such as Brain Based Learning to help them become skilled teachers;

To become more proficient in the Halq'eméylem Language, Stó:lō Shxweli, through the Secwepemc Cultural Education Society (SCES), offered a Certificate Program in Halq'eméylem Language Proficiency.  Subsequent to completing this program, students were offered the option of participating in a Halq'eméylem language Mentorship course also offered through the Secwepemc Cultural Education Society (SCES);

Participants who have participated in various of the activities above are now teaching in a variety of communities, including: public schools, Band schools, four levels of Halq'eméylem courses, informally in their communities, and to their children at home;

Stó:lō Shxweli has begun developing textbooks and resources for the offering of an Intensive Fluency Halq'eméylem immersion program, a 50-week, and 7-hour/day program.  The Intensive Fluency program is designed to develop highly fluent speakers of Halq'eméylem.

For more information, please visit www.stoloshxweli.org

 


 

SD33 Indigenizing the Curriculum Project
A Teachers’ Guide: Phase I


David Schaepe, Ernie Victor, and Sonny McHalsie
Stó:lō Research & Resource Management Centre / Stó:lō Nation
August 2014

 

Downoadable PowerPoint:

Stó:lō Research and Resource Management Centre
Bldg #10 – 7201 Vedder Road,
Chilliwack, BC, Canada
V2R 4G5

604-824-2420 / 1-800-565-6004

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