Winnipeg teachers learn how to weave colourful fabric into stories - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:59 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Winnipeg teachers learn how to weave colourful fabric into stories

It's a length of rope that tells a story. Story vines are tools that tell a story without written words, and this week, a group of Winnipeg teachers learned how to use them to bring Indigenous culture into their classrooms.

Story vines, a tool in oral storyelling traditions, help teachers bring Indigenous culture into classrooms

A group of Winnipeg teachers learn how to create story vines at a workshop at ArtsJunktion on Feb. 25. (Shannah-Lee Vidal/CBC)

It's a length of rope that tells a story.

Story vines arecolourfulpieces of art,intended to help tell astory without written wordsand this week, a group of Winnipeg teachers learned how to use them to bring Indigenous culture into their classrooms.

"They actually come from Africa, where they've used vines to create stories," saidReneeMcGurry. Sheled the recent workshop forabout 15 Winnipeg teachers, who got crafty at the community arts space ArtsJunktion andlearned how to create story vines.

McGurry, who now works with theTreaty Commission of Manitoba,began utilizing story vines in classrooms about 10 years ago.Sheretired a few years ago from the St. James-Assiniboia School Division, where she was the Indigenous educationco-ordinator.

Story vines are made of colourful fabrics and weave together various elements of a story. Pieces are attached along the vine to serve as cues referring to the major elements in a story. (Shannah-Lee Vidal/CBC)

While they don't actually have their roots in Indigenous history,McGurrysays they fit in well with oral traditions.

"That's how information and knowledge and teachings were passed down orally. SoI thought this was a perfect way of sharing stories like that the great flood or the creation stories using the vines as a way of doing that."

For the workshop, which came out of a grant from Manitoba Education, attendees were given the Cree flood and creation story.

They usedall kinds of art supplieswool, paint, drawings,beadsandpompoms, for exampleto create their story points and build vines between ametre and two metres long.

Teachers learning about story vines say they help connect people to various stories and cultures. (Shannah-Lee Vidal/CBC )

Then, pieces were attached along the vine to serve as cues referring to the major elements in the story, allowing the storytellerto relate the story orally from memory, finding the major story points as they runtheir hands down the length of the vine.

Vivian Fogarty, one of the workshop attendees, created her vine from red, gold and brown pieces of fabric that she braided together to retell the creation story.

"I am going to put the turtle to represent Turtle Island another name for North Americaand then use the other animals, the otter and the muskrat, to try and show how they are going to go down deep and in the water to try and get the earth," Fogarty said.

Anne Mottmade avine to tell the same story, puttinggoogly eyes on the brown furry animals she made.

Different colours and materials can be used to create the vines. (Shannah-Lee Vidal/CBC)

Mott said she wanted to learn "how to incorporate some more Indigenous perspective into art teaching, and even across curricular activity that can be used with a lot of teachers and different grades across different subject areas."

Any kind of story can be told withavine,McGurrysays.

She has her own personal story vine for her life one that tells the story ofwhere she was born, her school years and her children. She keeps adding to the vine as her life progresses.

"Doing workshops like this is always nice," she said. "It's sharing my knowledge, my experience, and seeing how excited they are over the fact that they can do a project like this, and it's very easy to incorporate into your classroom."