Champagne Raccoons
Grounded in Indigenous Storywork, this task draws on the story of champagne-coloured raccoons from Saysutshun, an island provincial park in the territory of the Snuneymuxw First Nation near Nanaimo. The story invites students to wonder, make connections, and explore mathematical ideas.
Celebrate Indigenous Math Culture
Johanne and Brandi organized a math mentorship day at a local high school, creating opportunities for students, teachers, and staff to engage with Indigenous math and logic games in a positive and meaningful way.
A Fomly Adventure: A decolonizing redesign of Foundations of Mathematics 12
Conventional teaching methods like lectures and tests have been replaced with collaboration and personalization through projects around ecotourism, and traditional root gardens.
What Is The Most Beautiful Thing You Know About Cedar Trees?
Inspired by What is the Most Beautiful Thing You Know About Horses? Students explore their environments mathematically, culminating in a story as the finished product.
Grade 8 Math Questions
Paul Beland created a set of problem-solving questions to follow chapters one through eight in the grade 8 mathematics curriculum.
Math For Language Development
Sealaska Heritage Institute Website
Math First Peoples 8/9
The Math First Peoples Teacher Resource Guide empowers BC educators to transform math learning through Indigenous perspectives, aiming to boost student success.
Tluuwaay ‘Waadluxan Mathematical Adventures
Tluuwaay ‘Waadluxan Mathematical Adventures offers fresh perspectives on math through land-based learning.







