Citizenship 9
Resources - For Teachers
Nova Scotia Virtual School (NSVS)/Moodle (Click here to access NSVS - Teachers only)
Curriculum Documents
Various E-Learning activities broken down by chapter, including quizzes
E-Book: Engaged Citizenship: Canadian Investigation
Youtube Webinar Series to help teachers get started with the course
Shared Google Drive Folders
1 for all Citizenship 9 teachers in NS - 100s (and growing) of resources/lesson plans/activities, etc.
1 for Citizenship 9 teachers at MK schools - feel free to add anything you'd like to share with other Citizenship 9 teachers at MK schools.
Can be accessed by clicking "Shared Drives" on the left tool bar once you're logged in to Google Drive.
If you have any questions, or need some help accessing any of these resources, contact Allan by email.
Resources - For Students
Nova Scotia Virtual School (NSVS)/Moodle (click here for instructions on how to access NSVS)
Various E-Learning activities broken down by chapter, including quizzes
E-Book: Engaged Citizenship: Canadian Investigation
Background
Starting in 2018-19, grade 9 students take "Citizenship 9" instead of "Social Studies 9." With inquiry at its centre, this course aims to engage learners as citizens at the local and global level. Learners will assess their own skills and goals as individuals and as members of a variety of communities, and will consider the ways they can be active citizens, with emphasis on how they can contribute to those communities even as young people. Learners will become empowered by gaining knowledge in the decision-making process and in their own understanding of rights and responsibilities. They will become aware of the importance of perspective and points of view on issues of community and Canadian significance, and will consider how historic and geographic decisions have affected citizenship in Canada and the world.
From this inquiry and empowerment, learners will act upon their understandings through a key component of the course - Service Learning. Service Learning connects curriculum outcomes, skills, and community needs. It enables learners to evaluate needs and their underlying causes, to make decisions that have real results, and to work collaboratively to affect change. The service learning piece is the capstone of the course and involves all learners in a meaningful service project. Different than individual volunteerism, it is about changes and not charity, and is outcomes-based.
The curriculum design for Citizenship Education follows a path which takes learners on a journey of inquiry from themselves and their communities, into the national, digital and global world and back to the community. While the outcomes and indicators have an implicit flow, the curriculum should be considered as a whole rather than in chronological units. In fact, it would be important for learners to consider what is to come (for example, the service learning piece), even while they are looking at their own skills and interests, and throughout their learning experiences. Citizenship education prepares learners to participate in their communities as engaged individuals.