People of all ages are connecting with Cree culture by learning the language in Saskatchewan. A bilingual elementary school offering Cree language learning in Saskatoon is so popular it may have to be ...
Re: Recent government cuts to funding for Saskatchewan language schools. Does the Government of Saskatchewan value language instruction in this province? Heritage language schools in Saskatchewan ...
The Dakota language is officially being added to the list of secondary level Indigenous language curricula available in Saskatchewan. The Dakota 10, 20, 30 curriculum will join other provincial ...
High school students in Saskatchewan will be able to take Nakoda language courses starting this fall. It’s the fifth Indigenous language class available at high schools across the province, which also ...
Saskatchewan high schools are adding another Indigenous language course to their curriculum beginning in September. Announced by the province on Monday, Nakoda courses will be available at the 10, 20 ...
OTTAWA, ON, March 10, 2025 /CNW/ - Our two official languages are at the heart of Canadian identity. They make us unique, unite us and enrich our culture from coast to coast to coast. Promoting and ...
Indigenous language skills are being lost in Saskatoon, despite the efforts of educators in the province and the emphasis placed on language preservation by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
When Rose Pacquette was growing up in Fond du Lac, she learned how to live from her mother and father, who spoke to her in their Dene language. The words conveyed a world view that stressed the value ...
Parents and volunteers say they fear the Saskatchewan government's decision to cut all funding for heritage language learning will mean the loss of culture. The province has said that after 25 years, ...
Elder McNeil McArthur oversees four young boys on a duck hunt in Saskatchewan's Pheasant Rump Nakota First Nation. McArthur used the Cree and Assiniboine languages while instructing the boys how to ...
Indigenous language skills are being lost in Saskatoon, despite the efforts of educators in the province and the emphasis placed on language preservation by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.