Modernization
Learn more about government’s intention to modernize the museum to protect our historic holdings and provide better access to our collections.
The objects included in the Writing on the Wall outreach kit are reproductions from the Royal BC Museum and the BC Archives. Two reproductions of wall fragments containing graffiti (or poems) are used to capture the interest of students. To learn more about the wall fragments and to answer the inquiry question “Does this graffiti deserve a place in the collection of the Royal BC Museum?” a selection of primary source documents (photographs, legislation, letters, head tax certificates and an advertisement) are also included. In addition to learning more about Chinese Canadian experience, students will also learn how to use primary sources as evidence and how to determine historical significance.
This resource was developed for the Ministry of International Trade and Responsible for Asia Pacific Strategy and Multiculturalism by the Royal British Columbia Museum in partnership with Open School BC, the Ministry of Education and the Legacy Initiatives Advisory Council.
The kits are available for loans to BC schools and organizations only. There are limited copies available so plan accordingly.
You are clearly the kind of teacher who goes the distance for their students. You’ve taken the time to plan ahead, check out this kit and work the subject into your schedule. As such, you are most likely familiar with the new resource Bamboo Shoots: Chinese Canadian Legacies in BC for Grade 5 and 10, created by Open School BC (Ministry of Education) on behalf of the Ministry of International Trade. This kit is not intended to replace those lesson plans but to supplement them. If you have done one or all of the lesson plans, then you are ready to go ahead.
The kit provides your class with a unique opportunity to look closely at primary resources, the core material for understanding our past.
Big Ideas Explored
Encourage your students to treat the material respectfully. Ask them to brainstorm about proper object-handling behaviour. Some suggestions: