![Sometimes I Feel Like a Fox](/sites/default/files/styles/ucws_hero_cta_desktop/public/2020-09/Sometimes-I-Feel-Like-a-Fox-Hero.jpg?itok=B-xzqLt8)
Sometimes I Feel Like a Fox
by Danielle Daniel
Description:
Publisher's description (Groundwood Books, 2015): In this introduction to the Anishinaabe tradition of totem animals, young children explain why they identify with different creatures such as a deer, beaver or moose. Delightful illustrations show the children wearing masks representing their chosen animal, while the few lines of text on each page work as a series of simple poems throughout the book.
In a brief author’s note, Danielle Daniel explains the importance of totem animals in Anishinaabe culture and how they can also act as animal guides for young children seeking to understand themselves and others. Danielle Daniel is Indigenous and Métis.
Resource format: Picturebook
Age recommendation: Pre-K to Grade 2
Keywords: Anishinaabe, traditions, totems, animals, clan system
Year of publication: 2015
Publisher information: Groundwood Books
Teaching and Learning Ideas
Our team collaborated with new teachers, alumni of the Werklund School of Education’s Bachelor of Education program, to create teaching and learning plans for texts in this website. With audiences ranging from Pre-Kindergarten to Post-Secondary, lesson plans across this resource address a wide range of school subject areas, inclusive approaches, and Indigenous education topics, such as the revitalization of Indigenous languages. As this website was designed with Undergraduate Programs in Education instructors, as well as teachers in mind, connections to UPE courses have been flagged on each lesson plan. These lessons are intended as a starting place for educators, to help you envision ways in which you might bring Indigenous literatures, as well as ways of knowing, being, and doing, into your teaching contexts. Please adapt, use, and share these lessons in ways that are generative for your teaching practice. We offer our sincere thanks to the dozens of new teachers who gifted us with these creative ideas!
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