Cover image for Canada's residential schools. The Inuit and Northern experience.
TITLE:
Canada's residential schools. The Inuit and Northern experience.
Alternate Title:
Canada's residential schools. Volume 2, The Inuit and Northern experience
Publication Date:
2015
Publication Information:
Montreal, Que. ; Published for The Truth and Reconciliation Commission,
Volume:
v. 2
Physical Description:
260 p. : ill.
Bibliography Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary:
Canada's Residential Schools: The Inuit and Northern Experience demonstrates that residential schooling followed a unique trajectory in the North. As late as 1950 there were only six residential schools and one hostel north of the sixtieth parallel. Prior to the 1950s, the federal government left northern residential schools in the hands of the missionary societies that operated largely in the Mackenzie Valley and the Yukon. It was only in the 1950s that Inuit children began attending residential schools in large numbers. The tremendous distances that Inuit children had to travel to school meant that, in some cases, they were separated from their parents for years. The establishment of day schools and what were termed small hostels in over a dozen communities in the eastern Arctic led many Inuit parents to settle in those communities on a year-round basis so as not to be separated from their children, contributing to a dramatic transformation of the Inuit economy and way of life.
Language:
English
ISBN:
9780773546547