Indigenous Ally Toolkit

Last Updated:

Target Audience:

This resource is primarily intended for teachers who wish to educate themselves about Indigenous issues in Canada and model allyship in their classrooms. While not designed specifically for ESL students, it can be thoughtfully adapted by instructors to introduce topics such as reconciliation, respectful language, and social responsibility within a Canadian context.

Context for Application:

It can be used in ESL adult-immigrant classrooms to explore Canadian reconciliation, anti-racism frameworks, and meaningful allyship. A lesson could focus on vocabulary, respectful language, critical reflection, and role-play of real scenarios (e.g., community events, system navigation involving Indigenous peoples).

Value:

This toolkit offers practical steps—including reflection prompts, incorrect-&-correct term lists, and action-based guidance—for moving beyond token gestures toward sustained engagement. Embedded definitions of complex terms like “co-resistor” ground discussions in lived experience and support language, cultural awareness, and civic integration.

Description:

This toolkit is written by a multidisciplinary team composed of both Indigenous leaders and non-Indigenous allies in the city of Montreal. It provides key information and steps for being an ally, and discusses appropriate terminology, definitions and motivations.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *