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orange shirt day Educational Resources

Phyllis Webstad began Orange Shirt Day to honour the Survivors and intergenerational Survivors or residential schools, and remember those children who never made it home. Orange Shirt Day is an opportunity for people of all ages, backgrounds, and cultural identities to engage with the legacies of the residential school system.

Below are educational resources and learning activities for children and people of all ages to learn about the legacies of the residential school system.

When We Were Alone Discussion Questions

  • In the story, the words used to describe the narrator’s grandmother are kókum and Nókum (“grandmother” and “my grandmother”).  These are the words in Nókum’s language which is Cree, What words do you use for grandmother in your language?
  • How do you think Nókum felt when she was made to wear different clothes and speak a different language at school? Did Nókum have a choice about what she wore or what language she spoke?
  • What are some of the things Nókum did with her family before she went away to residential school? Why was Nókum separated from her brother?

Orange Shirt Day Handout Questions for Discussion

  • Where was Phyllis from?  What was the name of her home community?
  • What happened to Phyllis’s orange shirt when she arrived at school?  How did this experience make Phyllis feel?
  • How do you think Phyllis and other children felt while at School?
  • Why is it important to Phyllis to share her story?  What impact does it have on others to hear it?
  • How do you think hearing support for Phyllis and her story will impact the lives of other Residential School survivors?
  • When a person chooses to wear an orange shirt on Orange Shirt Day, what statement are they making?
  • Ask your relatives about what they learned about residential schools.
  • Watch the Residential Schools Timeline Video (video below) and then tell someone else about what you learned.
  • Find out if there was a residential school near where you live. Look at the distances between schools and communities.
  • Having trouble finding words to express what you learned? Make some art.
  • Watch Phyllis Webstad and hear her testimony

Residential Schools Timeline Video Discussion Questions

  • Did you find a residential school in your area?  If so, does this come as a surprise to you? If not, where was the nearest residential school?
  • Do you have an older relative who remembers a residential school in your area? What were their perceptions about residential schools?
  • Take some more time to reflect on the location of your City, town, or community. In whose traditional territory do you reside?  What is the language spoken?

Discussion and reflection questions

  • Choose a survivor testimony from the Legacy of Hope Foundation.  When doing so, please remember to practice good self care (whatever that looks like for you) before, during and after listening  as these stories can be difficult to listen to.
  • While listening, it might be a good idea to draw as you listen, paint, sing or write poetry to help you process what you have heard.
  • How did you feel while listening to the story?
  • Who was the story about and what was their home community?
  • How did the Residential School experience impact the life of the story teller and the lives of those around them?

Read the TRC’s Calls to Action and choose one to focus on.  

  1. Which action have you chosen and why?
  2. Why do you feel it is significant to act upon these calls?
  3. Who does this call impact and how?