BC First Nations Studies 12 - Ministry of Education
Transcription
BC First Nations Studies 12 - Ministry of Education
BC First Nations Studies 12 Examination Booklet Sample 2010/11 DO NOT OPEN ANY EXAMINATION MATERIALS UNTIL INSTRUCTED TO DO SO. FOR FURTHER INSTRUCTIONS REFER TO THE RESPONSE BOOKLET. Contents: 21 pages 55 selected-response questions 2 written-response questions Examination: 2 hours Additional Time Permitted: 60 minutes © Province of British Columbia PART A: SELECTED RESPONSE Value: 70% Suggested Time: 50 minutes INSTRUCTIONS: For each question, select the best answer and record your choice on the Response Booklet provided. Using an HB pencil, completely fill in the bubble that has the letter corresponding to your answer. You have Examination Booklet Form A. In the box above #1 on your Response Booklet, fill in the bubble as follows. Use the following information to answer question 1. • Wet’suwet’en • Gitxsan 1. In which geographic region of BC are these traditional territories located? A. B. C. D. Coast Northeast Southern Interior Northern Interior BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Page 1 Use the following map to answer question 2. British Columbia Pacific Ocean 2. Which cultural group claims the striped area as their traditional territory? A. B. C. D. Page 2 Sekani Nuxalk Tsimshian Kwakwaka’wakw BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Use the following information to answer question 3. Winter: feasts, potlatches Spring: oolichan fishing Summer: salmon runs 3. In which geographic region does this seasonal round take place? A. B. C. D. Coast Northeast Southern Interior Northern Interior ________________________________________________ 4. What are soapberries used for? A. B. C. D. a starch a dessert a pain reliever a face cleanser 5. Which natural resource did the Dene-thah use to make clothing? A. B. C. D. birch cedar moose sea otter 6. Which natural resource did pre-contact First Nations use to make knife blades? A. B. C. D. iron copper argillite obsidian BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Page 3 7. What did Interior First Nations most commonly use to make fishing nets? A. B. C. D. spruce root licorice fern camas bulbs Indian hemp 8. What was the main purpose of coiled baskets? A. B. C. D. to store food to store regalia to show family alliances to demonstrate artistic expression 9. Which statement is an example of Interior First Nations resource management? A. B. C. D. Page 4 Women ran the fish camps while the men hunted. Permanent villages were established to share resources. Hereditary chiefs made all decisions around resource use. Family fish sites could be used by others with permission. BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 www.sealaskaheritage.org/collection Use the following photograph to answer question 10. 10. What is the name of the tool represented in the photograph? A. B. C. D. adze scraper fish club carving knife ________________________________________________ 11. Which statement best describes the First Nations traditional view of the natural world? A. B. C. D. People should determine uses of the land. Resources should not be taken from the land. People are one part of the whole environment. Land is intended to provide wages for the people. 12. Traditionally, who was responsible for gathering plants in most First Nations communities? A. B. C. D. the men the elders the women the children BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Page 5 13. Which grouping best describes traditional First Nations education? A. B. C. D. tolerance, note-taking, listening storytelling, hands-on learning, practice corporal punishment, storytelling, practice hands-on learning, note-taking, observation 14. All of the following statements are true about traditional education with regards to land except A. B. C. D. First Nations learned about the land by travelling with their families. First Nations learned about which territories belonged to their family. First Nations learned how to make money off the land and resources. First Nations learned how their connection to the land was passed down. Smithsonian Institution, National Anthropological Archives #54663 www.si.edu Use the following photograph to answer question 15. 15. What traditional BC trade item is represented in the photograph? A. B. C. D. Page 6 argillite red ochre dentalium porcupine quills BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 16. Which statement best describes how pre-contact trade was conducted? A. B. C. D. Trade routes were controlled by women. One runner was chosen to transport goods. Goods were often traded through intermediaries. Goods were traded strictly with close neighbours. 17. What is Chinook jargon? A. B. C. D. the language spoken at residential schools a language that was developed during trade the Aboriginal language of the Chinook people a combination of English and Michif languages 18. Which of the following is an example of a cause-and-effect relationship? Cause Effect A. Captain Cook’s voyage discovery of gold B. Juan Perez’s voyage discovery of the Northwest Passage C. Captain Cook’s voyage beginning of the maritime fur trade D. Juan Perez’s voyage beginning of the Hudson’s Bay Company 19. How did smallpox spread to the Interior region of BC? A. B. C. D. Infected people were quarantined in the Interior. Infected people carried it through trade networks. Interior people moved to infected coastal villages. Infected coastal children were orphaned to the Interior. 20. Which document first recognized Métis as a distinct Aboriginal group? A. B. C. D. White Paper, 1969 Constitution Act, 1982 Bill C-31, 1985 Royal Commission on Aboriginal People, 1996 BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Page 7 21. How did the concept of terra nullius affect First Nations? A. B. C. D. Land was purchased. Fishing rights were supported. Aboriginal title was not recognized. First Nations protocol was followed. 22. What was James Douglas’ goal for establishing reserves? A. B. C. D. to relocate First Nations to isolated reserves to equally distribute the land between First Nations and settlers to open up BC for settlement without conflict with First Nations to ensure First Nations received financial compensation for their lands 23. How did the gold miners treat First Nations? A. B. C. D. They relied on First Nations as guides. They negotiated treaties with First Nations. The ignored First Nations traditional use of lands. They encouraged First Nations to participate in the gold rush. 24. How did the introduction of the Indian Act affect local First Nations governance? A. B. C. D. Page 8 It imposed an elected council. It prohibited local government. It introduced the hereditary system. It promoted Indian Agents as chiefs. BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Use the following newspaper headline to answer question 25. Victoria Colonist 1865 Empty lands await eager farmers! 25. To what does this headline refer? A. B. C. D. pre-emption cut-off lands enfranchisement self-determination ________________________________________________ 26. How did settlers affect First Nations economies? A. B. C. D. by offering high paying jobs to First Nations by encouraging First Nations to open businesses. by shifting the traditional economy to a wage-based economy by refusing to allow First Nations women to enter the wage economy 27. Who was Dan Cranmer? A. B. C. D. An Okanagan rancher who fought for grazing rights. A Tsimshian fisherman who organized a trade union. A Kwakwaka’wakw chief arrested for hosting a potlatch. A chief of the Williams Lake band who fought for fishing rights. BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Page 9 28. Why did many residential schools have a half-day plan? A. B. C. D. to allow students to attend church to allow students to work at home to allow students to perform chores to allow students to learn about their culture 29. What was the main goal of the government’s residential school policy? A. B. C. D. tokenism repatriation assimilation marginalization 30. What was the initial response by First Nations to residential schools? A. B. C. D. They built their own schools. They refused to send their children. They forced the government to hire First Nations teachers. They protested until First Nations languages were taught in schools. 31. What was the official reason for the formation of the McKenna-McBride Commission? A. B. C. D. to assign lands for railways to reduce the size of reserves to review the size of reserves to cut off reserve lands for settlers 32. What did the Nisga’a do to regain control of their ancestral lands? A. B. C. D. Page 10 They planned an uprising. They pre-empted the land. They pursued an agreement. They accepted the government’s laws. BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Use the following newspaper headline to answer question 33. Fort George Gazette 1864 Hanging judge sentences five chiefs to death 33. To what event is the headline referring? A. B. C. D. the Oka Crisis the Tsilhqot’in War the Red River Resistance the Gustafson Lake confrontation ________________________________________________ 34. What document has raised issues about identity and membership in First Nations communities? A. B. C. D. Royal Proclamation, 1763 Laurier Memorial, 1910 Constitution Act, 1982 Bill C-31, 1985 35. What was one of the goals of the 1969 White Paper? A. B. C. D. to eliminate the Indian Act to ban fundraising for land claims to give First Nations women equal rights to advance the recognition of Aboriginal rights BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Page 11 36. Which Indian reserve commissioner supported fair treatment for First Nations? A. B. C. D. Peter Kelly G.M. Sproat Peter O’Reilly Duncan Campbell Scott Use the following poem to answer question 37. Round Dance Don’t break this circle Before the song is over Because all of our people Even the ones long gone are holding hands Sarain Stump, Cree/Shoshone from Native Poetry in Canada 37. Which statement best describes the message of the poem? A. B. C. D. History should not repeat itself. Knowledge dies with the passing of Elders. It is important to continue the teachings of our ancestors. It is necessary for each generation to determine its own direction. ________________________________________________ 38. Which term is used to classify a person who does not meet the definition of “Indian” as defined in the Indian Act? A. B. C. D. Page 12 urban treaty non-status off-reserve BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Use the following list to answer question 39. • Peter Kelly • George Manuel • Andrew Paull 39. What do these people have in common? A. B. C. D. They are well-known Métis leaders. They were involved with negotiating major treaties. They are leaders who fought for First Nations rights. They were involved in a major court case on fishing rights. Use the following newspaper headline to answer question 40. Prince George Times 2000 Local Aboriginal man arrested for hunting moose out of season 40. Which document best supports this person’s rights? A. B. C. D. Indian Act Amendments, 1951 White Paper, 1969 Constitution Act, 1982 Meech Lake Accord, 1990 ________________________________________________ 41. Which of the following is true about many Aboriginal soldiers after the First and Second World Wars? A. B. C. D. they regained their status they did not receive medals they received large tracts of land they were denied full veteran’s benefits BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Page 13 42. What was the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision on the Delgamuukw case? A. B. C. D. Aboriginal title has never been extinguished. The Gitxsan-Wet’suwet’en have no claim to land. The treaty signed in 1850 ended claim to land title. The Gitxsan-Wet’suwet’en may remove settlers from land. Use the following newspaper headline to answer question 43. Spuzzum Star 1999 Off-reserve First Nations granted right to vote in band elections 43. To what court case does this headline refer? A. B. C. D. Guerin Sparrow Corbière Van der Peet Use the following information to answer question 44. • Nisga’a claimed ancestral land title was never extinguished • Supreme Court of Canada decision was split on land title question 44. Which court case is being described? A. B. C. D. Page 14 Calder Powley Sparrow Van der Peet BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 45. What controversial issue affects the Métis today? A. B. C. D. Agreeing on a definition of Métis. Deciding how leaders will be chosen. Deciding whether Métis should be included in the Indian Act. Agreeing on the amount of land to be allocated for reserves in BC. 46. All of the following are contemporary challenges on many First Nations reserves except A. B. C. D. poor water quality inadequate housing access to healthcare low unemployment rate 47. Why was the number of Aboriginal soldiers enlisted during World War II much higher than the number actually recorded by the Indian Affairs Branch? A. B. C. D. Loss of life was not included. Aboriginal women were excluded. Individual bands refused to send the numbers to Indian Affairs. Non-status Indians and Métis were not always included in the count. 48. Which statement best describes the trickster? A. B. C. D. He is a caring character who helps others. He teaches moral lessons through his antics. He teaches lessons by being a positive role model. He is a harmless character who provides entertainment. BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Page 15 Use the following information to answer question 49. One day Raven enraged his master and was cast out into the ocean world. He flew over the ocean for a long period of time until he became weary. Unable to find a place to rest, Raven became angry. He began to beat his wings upon the water until the water rose up and touched the clouds around him. Excerpt from “The Beginning of the Haida World” from Indian Legends of Canada by Ella Elizabeth Clark Used by permission of McClelland & Stewart Ltd. 49. What is this an example of? A. B. C. D. fable creation story family narrative historical narrative Use the following quotation to answer question 50. “My peoples’ memory reaches into the beginning of all things.” Chief Dan George, Coast Salish 50. Which statement best reflects the meaning of this quotation? A. B. C. D. Page 16 First Nations people must remember their past. First Nations people have a deep respect for the land. First Nations people are involved with the natural world. First Nations people have been here since time immemorial. BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Canadian Museum of Civilization Use the following photograph to answer question 51. Chilkat blanket 51. What resources would be used to make this Chilkat blanket? A. B. C. D. horse tail and deer hide goat wool and cedar bark sheep wool and moose hide Indian hemp and salmon skin ________________________________________________ 52. What has been a major challenge for many Aboriginal writers? A. B. C. D. They had difficulty getting published. Elders did not want to share their stories. They had to establish a distinct Aboriginal voice. There were too many Aboriginal writers to compete with. BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Page 17 CANADA FANCY APPLES BRITISH COLUMBIA FRUIT SUPPLIERS LTD. Kelowna Centennial Museum Association Use the following picture to answer question 53. 53. What is this product label an example of? A. B. C. D. tokenism assimilation stereotyping ethnocentrism ________________________________________________ 54. Which statement is true about BC First Nations art? A. B. C. D. Page 18 Most objects are of human figures. First Nations art is in decline today. Very few BC coast cultures produce art. Artists mix the practical with the decorative. BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 55. Which statement is an example of repatriation? A. B. C. D. Asking for permission to display an artifact. The acknowledgement of an artifact’s designer. The return of an artifact to its original community. A provincial museum purchases an artifact to display. You have Examination Booklet Form A. In the box above #1 on your Response Booklet, ensure you filled in the bubble as follows. This is the end of the selected-response section. Answer the remaining questions directly in the Response Booklet. BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Page 19 PART B: ESSAY Value: 30% Suggested Time: 70 minutes INSTRUCTIONS: Write your answers in ink in the space provided in the Response Booklet. No work written in this examination booklet will be marked. • Your response should be in a multi-paragraph format including an introduction and a conclusion. • Your response may also include current events and local or personal examples. • Your response should have detailed information and specific examples. 1. Explain the importance of First Nations oral tradition. (15%) Organization and Planning Use this space to plan your ideas before writing in the Response Booklet. WRITING ON THIS PAGE WILL NOT BE MARKED Page 20 BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 2. Explain how the Indian Act has impacted the lives of First Nations. (15%) Organization and Planning Use this space to plan your ideas before writing in the Response Booklet. WRITING ON THIS PAGE WILL NOT BE MARKED END OF EXAMINATION BC First Nations Studies 12 Sample Exam 2010/11 Page 21 Place Personal Education Number (PEN) here. Place Personal Education Number (PEN) here. Question 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 NR 3 4 5 6 NR Examination Rules Question 2 1. The time allotted for this examination is two hours. You may, however, take up to 60 minutes of additional time to finish. 0 Course Code = FNS 12 2. Answers entered in the Examination Booklet will not be marked. 3. Cheating on an examination will result in a mark of zero. The Ministry of Education considers cheating to have occurred if students break any of the following rules: • Students must not be in possession of or have used any secure examination materials prior to the examination session. • Students must not communicate with other students during the examination. • Students must not give or receive assistance of any kind in answering an examination question during an examination, including allowing their papers to be viewed by others or copying answers from another student’s paper. • Students must not possess any book, paper or item that might assist in writing an examination, including a dictionary or piece of electronic equipment, that is not specifically authorized for the examination by ministry policy. • Students must not copy, plagiarize or present as their own, work done by any other person. • Students must immediately follow the invigilator’s order to stop writing at the end of the examination time and must not alter an Examination Booklet, Response Booklet or Answer Sheet after the invigilator has asked students to hand in examination papers. • Students must not remove any piece of the examination materials from the examination room, including work pages. 4. The use of inappropriate language or content may result in a mark being awarded. of zero BC First Nations Studies 12 SAMPLE 2010/11 Response Booklet Student Instructions 1.Place your Personal Education Number (PEN) label at the top of this Booklet AND fill in the bubble (Form A, B, C, D, E, F, G or H) that corresponds to the letter on your Examination Booklet. 2. Use a pencil to fill in bubbles when answering multiple-choice, matching and true-false questions on the front of this Booklet. 3. Use a blue- or black-ink pen when answering written-response questions in this Booklet. 4. Read the Examination Rules on the back of this Booklet. 5. Do not tear off the Answer Sheet. 5. Upon completion of the examination, return all examination materials to the supervising invigilator. A C D E B C F D A E F B G C H D E F 1 21 41 2 3 22 23 42 43 4 24 44 5 25 45 6 A B C D E F 26 A B C D E F 46 7 27 47 8 9 28 29 48 49 10 30 50 11 A B C D E F 31 A B C D E F 51 12 32 52 13 33 53 14 15 34 35 54 55 16 © Province of British Columbia B A A B C D E F 36 17 37 18 38 19 39 20 40 A 2 12 Course Code = FNS SAMPLE 2010/11 Exam Booklet Form/ , Cahier d examen 1 B C D Unfold front cover flap to respond to questions 41 to 55. E A B C D E F A B C D E F A B C D E F F 3146 Version 0601.1 Place Personal Education Number (PEN) here. Place Personal Education Number (PEN) here. Question 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 NR 3 4 5 6 NR Examination Rules Question 2 1. The time allotted for this examination is two hours. You may, however, take up to 60 minutes of additional time to finish. 0 Course Code = FNS 12 2. Answers entered in the Examination Booklet will not be marked. 3. Cheating on an examination will result in a mark of zero. The Ministry of Education considers cheating to have occurred if students break any of the following rules: • Students must not be in possession of or have used any secure examination materials prior to the examination session. • Students must not communicate with other students during the examination. • Students must not give or receive assistance of any kind in answering an examination question during an examination, including allowing their papers to be viewed by others or copying answers from another student’s paper. • Students must not possess any book, paper or item that might assist in writing an examination, including a dictionary or piece of electronic equipment, that is not specifically authorized for the examination by ministry policy. • Students must not copy, plagiarize or present as their own, work done by any other person. • Students must immediately follow the invigilator’s order to stop writing at the end of the examination time and must not alter an Examination Booklet, Response Booklet or Answer Sheet after the invigilator has asked students to hand in examination papers. • Students must not remove any piece of the examination materials from the examination room, including work pages. 4. The use of inappropriate language or content may result in a mark being awarded. of zero BC First Nations Studies 12 SAMPLE 2010/11 Response Booklet Student Instructions 1.Place your Personal Education Number (PEN) label at the top of this Booklet AND fill in the bubble (Form A, B, C, D, E, F, G or H) that corresponds to the letter on your Examination Booklet. 2. Use a pencil to fill in bubbles when answering multiple-choice, matching and true-false questions on the front of this Booklet. 3. Use a blue- or black-ink pen when answering written-response questions in this Booklet. 4. Read the Examination Rules on the back of this Booklet. 5. Do not tear off the Answer Sheet. 5. Upon completion of the examination, return all examination materials to the supervising invigilator. A C D E B C F D A E F B G C H D E F 1 21 41 2 3 22 23 42 43 4 24 44 5 25 45 6 A B C D E F 26 A B C D E F 46 7 27 47 8 9 28 29 48 49 10 30 50 11 A B C D E F 31 A B C D E F 51 12 32 52 13 33 53 14 15 34 35 54 55 16 © Province of British Columbia B A A B C D E F 36 17 37 18 38 19 39 20 40 A 2 12 Course Code = FNS SAMPLE 2010/11 Exam Booklet Form/ , Cahier d examen 1 B C D Unfold front cover flap to respond to questions 41 to 55. E A B C D E F A B C D E F A B C D E F F 3146 Version 0601.1 PART B: WRITTEN-RESPONSE QUESTIONS Question 1: BC First Nations Studies 12 – Sample Exam 2010/11 Response Booklet Page 1 Page 2 BC First Nations Studies 12 – Sample Exam 2010/11 Response Booklet END OF QUESTION 1 BC First Nations Studies 12 – Sample Exam 2010/11 Response Booklet Page 3 Question 2: Page 4 BC First Nations Studies 12 – Sample Exam 2010/11 Response Booklet BC First Nations Studies 12 – Sample Exam 2010/11 Response Booklet Page 5 END OF EXAMINATION Page 6 BC First Nations Studies 12 – Sample Exam 2010/11 Response Booklet Place Personal Education Number (PEN) here. Place Personal Education Number (PEN) here. Question 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 NR 3 4 5 6 NR Examination Rules Question 2 1. The time allotted for this examination is two hours. You may, however, take up to 60 minutes of additional time to finish. 0 Course Code = FNS 12 2. Answers entered in the Examination Booklet will not be marked. 3. Cheating on an examination will result in a mark of zero. The Ministry of Education considers cheating to have occurred if students break any of the following rules: • Students must not be in possession of or have used any secure examination materials prior to the examination session. • Students must not communicate with other students during the examination. • Students must not give or receive assistance of any kind in answering an examination question during an examination, including allowing their papers to be viewed by others or copying answers from another student’s paper. • Students must not possess any book, paper or item that might assist in writing an examination, including a dictionary or piece of electronic equipment, that is not specifically authorized for the examination by ministry policy. • Students must not copy, plagiarize or present as their own, work done by any other person. • Students must immediately follow the invigilator’s order to stop writing at the end of the examination time and must not alter an Examination Booklet, Response Booklet or Answer Sheet after the invigilator has asked students to hand in examination papers. • Students must not remove any piece of the examination materials from the examination room, including work pages. 4. The use of inappropriate language or content may result in a mark being awarded. of zero BC First Nations Studies 12 SAMPLE 2010/11 Response Booklet Student Instructions 1.Place your Personal Education Number (PEN) label at the top of this Booklet AND fill in the bubble (Form A, B, C, D, E, F, G or H) that corresponds to the letter on your Examination Booklet. 2. Use a pencil to fill in bubbles when answering multiple-choice, matching and true-false questions on the front of this Booklet. 3. Use a blue- or black-ink pen when answering written-response questions in this Booklet. 4. Read the Examination Rules on the back of this Booklet. 5. Do not tear off the Answer Sheet. 5. Upon completion of the examination, return all examination materials to the supervising invigilator. A C D E B C F D A E F B G C H D E F 1 21 41 2 3 22 23 42 43 4 24 44 5 25 45 6 A B C D E F 26 A B C D E F 46 7 27 47 8 9 28 29 48 49 10 30 50 11 A B C D E F 31 A B C D E F 51 12 32 52 13 33 53 14 15 34 35 54 55 16 © Province of British Columbia B A A B C D E F 36 17 37 18 38 19 39 20 40 A 2 12 Course Code = FNS SAMPLE 2010/11 Exam Booklet Form/ , Cahier d examen 1 B C D Unfold front cover flap to respond to questions 41 to 55. E A B C D E F A B C D E F A B C D E F F 3146 Version 0601.1