From the CBC:
“New Cree language app targets
students, teachers and newcomers”
Cree-speaking elders from five
First Nations contributed to the Kee Tas Kee Now Tribal Council Education
Authority's new language-learning app. (Kee Tas Kee Now Tribal Council
Education Authority) More than 150 elders from five northern Alberta First
Nations have contributed to a new tool designed to preserve Cree words and
phrases. The free app, KTCEA Elders Speak, is a product of the Kee Tas Kee Now
Tribal Council Education Authority, which oversees six schools within five
northern Alberta First Nations: Peerless Trout First Nation, Whitefish Lake
First Nation, Loon River First Nation, Lubicon Lake Band, and Woodland Cree
First Nation. The app documents Cree as it is spoken in the region northwest of
Grande Prairie, Alta. Students who use it will find 900 Cree words and phrases
identifying local plants, wildlife and daily activities. Each word was recorded
by a local elder. "We chose an app to preserve the language so we could
hear our elders speak for many years to come," said Audrey Anderson, the
education authority's land-based curriculum co-ordinator. In an interview with
CBC's Radio Active, Anderson said she worked with elders from all five of the
First Nations for several years to gather material for the app. "I'm so
proud of the the teaching tool that came to be through their direction and
their vision of what our students should be learning in our education
authority," she said. Curriculum co-ordinator Audrey Anderson said elders
were asked to choose categories and words for the app based on what they wanted
children to learn. (Kee Tas Kee Now Tribal Council Education Authority) Anderson
expects the app will also be used to educate newcomers, including teachers, in
the region. The education authority funded the app with grants from the
provincial and federal governments.
^ This is a very modern way to
preserve an ancient language. It’s also a good way to get the younger
generations to become interested and start learning or just improve their
language skills. ^
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