Ted Harrison Unit Plan
Ted Harrison Unit Plan
Ted Harrison Unit Plan
- Create a Yukon Regional Newspaper having each child write an article/column for the newspaper
(connecting to a topic from the stories and books you have read in class). Incorporate technology,
having students type their stories, and incorporate all the articles into a single document. Give each
child a copy of the newspaper and read together in class.
Create a math and science lesson looking at the temperatures, snowfall, etc... of Dawson City at
Christmastime (referring to the Cremation of Sam McGee). Calculate averages and math problems
of addition and subtraction (snow accumulation vs. melting).
Incorporate Canadian history, regionalism, and First Nations' ways of knowing exploring how people
would survive the winter and stay warm in the north prior to electricity. Incorporate art into projects
depicting these methods of staying warm.
Develop a word wall for the unit and incorporate this vocabulary into activities. Charades, word
searches, journal entries, definition games, etc.
Expand this unit to incorporate other Canadian literature from the North (perhaps from rom the North
West Territories, Nunavut, and Northern Quebec).
Building on the Northern Alphabet you could also expand this unit into a unit on alphabet books.
Have students in small groups build board games based on the expedition of Sam McGee.
Create a recording of the students reading the Cremation of Sam McGee accompanied with their
drawings depicting the particular stanza(s) they are reading. This could be made into a private
YouTube video (in the style of Johnny Cash reading the Cremation of Sam McGee) that could be
shared with parents and presented at a school assembly.
While working on this unit have an image and quote of the day taken from the material being used.
Place these in a visible location in the classroom such as the door or front board (or next to the word
wall).
Culminating Task(s):
Students will have collaborated to create a laminated and bound alphabet book reflecting their local
community and surroundings. Each student will practice reading their page out loud. The entire class
will visit their "buddy class" of older grade 7 students and read and present the class book to their
buddies. For the following month the book will be on display in the school library so that other classes
can appreciate and admire the work that the students have done. It will then be returned to the
classroom and given a prominent place in the classroom reading corner.
Resources:
Gibson, Katherine. A Brush Full of Colour: The World of Ted Harrison. Toronto: Pajama Press, 2014.
Bud, Robert. Ted Harrison Collected. Toronto: Douglas & McIntyr, 2015.
Harrison, Ted. The Blue Raven. Toronto: MacMillan Publishing Canada, 1989.
Harrison, Ted. The Cremation of Sam McGee. Toronto: Kids Can Press, 2013.
Harrison, Ted. A Northern Alphabet. Toronto: Tundra Books, 2009.
BC Curriculum. British Columbia Ministry of Education. http://www.curriculum.gov.bc.ca
Ted Harrison Studio [tedharrisonstudio]. (May 6, 2011). Ted Harrison Interview.
Retrieved from: https://youtube.com/watch?v=dK9HrbZrM8M
[shartfel]. (Nov. 26, 2009). Ted Harrison Interview on Canada AM.
Retrieved from: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3w_-Z9KVEhI
[DrSwarly]. (Apr. 20, 2011). The Cremation of Sam McGee - Read by Johnny Cash.
Retrieved from: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v==wGhFNYll_mU
[NorthwestelTV]. (Jan. 16, 2015). Ted Harrison 1986 Interview.
Retrieved from: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o7KmWH4EqNw
Links to access the above resources, as well as additional resources are available at:
www.educationrelation.weebly.com/ted-harrison-unit.html
Various classroom supplies needed: paper, writing utensils, erasers, paint, pencil crayons, felts, paper,
templates for book pages, chart paper, photocopied and cut sections of The Cremation of Sam
McGee, construction paper, glue, laminating and binding supplies, electronic device with internet
access, digital projector, etc.