Casual Tees Hey, What’s Poppins, Mary? Don’t Believe me? It’s Trudeau A is for… Ever Since I left the City You 100 200 300 400 500.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Urbanization 1850s – people in rural areas of Great Britain began moving to cities to search for work This growth of cities is known as urbanization, and.
Advertisements

T HE CITY AND INTEGRATION OF IMMIGRANTS : U RBAN PLANNING POLICIES FOR MULTICULTURAL CITIES Dr. Mohammad Qadeer & Dr. Sandeep Agrawal.
Social 10-2 Globalization Case Study #5: Identity.
Multiculturalism March 29, 2012.
Opportunities & Challenges to Globalization Elements of Globalization Related Issue 1 Elements of Globalization Related Issue 1.
E Pluribus Unum (one from many) United States History Immigration: History and Issues.
Chapter 1 We the People Section 1: Civics in Our Lives
Chapter 5 BY: AIDAN AND PATRICK, AND SIR MATHESON FRASER OF THE DONALD CLAN.
Understandings of Globalization
Trudeau Multicultural Act To recognize the heterogeneous nature of Canadian society 6 programs were established including museums, libraries, archives,
Communication & Intercultural Competence
 Migration  Another “A” words, ACCULTURATION  And yet another more, AFFIRMATION  Cultural Revitalization.
Chapter 1: Should Globalization shape identity?
The Economy and Culture Globalization. Economic Policies ProtectionismFree trade Goal: to protect national production from outside competition. Some measures:
Learn the Terms Refer to Chapters 3-4 for answers
Social 10-1 Chapter 4 Affirming Identity, Language, and Culture Review.
Chapter 8, Section 1 A Heritage of Diversity and Exchange.
C HAPTER 5 – G LOBAL O PPORTUNITIES Unit One Final Chapter.
Social There are about 6000 communities/languages in the world, which means there are numerous different values, beliefs, practices and expressions.
English and Migration Chapter 2 The Politics of English (Book 2)
Future Issues and challenges in the Canadian Economy Canada’s Role in a Global Economy Demographic Patterns Disparity Sustainability.
Unit 1 Globalization CGW 4U0. Globalization ✤ the trend toward greater interconnectedness of the world’s financial, economic, technological, political,
8 types of Globalization
Lesson 2 What collective rights do official language groups have under the Charter?
Multicultural Education, Bilingual Education and Student Diversity Márcio Padilha EDUC 205 – Meyerhoeffer Fall/2007.
GLOBALIZATION CHAPTER 1-4 REVIEW. GLOBALIZATION? SHOULD GLOBALIZATION SHAPE IDENTITY? ECONOMIC SOCIAL POLITICAL INDIVIDUAL COLLECTIVE MAINTAINING PROMOTING.
HUMAN GEOGRAPHY. PARTS OF HUMAN GEOGRAPHY Cultural Geography Economic Geography Political Geography Urban Geography Population Geography.
IDENTITY AND CULTURE IN A GLOBALIZED WORLD Individual and group identity Immigration Languages Bilingualism.
Global Opportunities Chapter 5. In what ways does globalization create new opportunities for identity? We have a chance to expand our identity. We can.
GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES  Accommodation and Integration in Urban Centres  Cultural Revitalization  Affirmation of Identity in a Globalized World.
Technologies and Promotion of Culture in a Globalizing World Chapter 3.
Chapter 1: Understandings of Globalization
Culture Terminology. Culture Terms Culture – Everything connected with the way humans live in groups (history, politics, environment, etc.) (history,
Understandings of Identity. Chapter 1 – Thinking About Identity and Ideologies2 To What Extent are Ideology and Identity Interrelated? Question for Inquiry.
Chapter 1 We the People Section 1: Civics in Our Lives
We the People.
Chapter 3: Technologies & Promotion of culture in a Globalizing World
Opportunities in Globalization
Promotion of Language & Culture
Dimensions of Globalization.
HUMAN GEOGRAPHY.
What do you think about… Jolene?
Communications Technology and Media in a Global Environment
Chapter 6: Our Cultural Mosaic
Identity, the Media, and Communication Technology CH 3, pages 66-87
Opportunities for Identity
Chapter 1: Understandings of Globalization
Chapter 4 Unit 1 Global Challenges.
Exploring Globalization
Challenges of Globalization
Part 1 Mr. Zonnefeld & Mr. Rist Tuesday, November 28, 2017
The Quest for Canadian Unity
Unit 1 – Chapter 4 Global Challenges
SOCIAL STUDIES VOCABULARY TERMS TO KNOW
Multiculturalism.
The Settlement and Integration Vision
Folk vs. Pop Culture and globalization
8 types of Globalization
Multicultural Literature Vocabulary
Industrialization Unit
Cultural Diversity: Assimilation or Integration?
The Banana Trade: A Case Study
Multiculturalism.
Culture and Identity.
Multicultural Literature Vocabulary
Chapter 1 We the People Section 1: Civics in Our Lives
Challenges to Identity
The Banana Trade: A Case Study
To what extent should I embrace a national identity?
Chapter 1 We the People Section 1: Civics in Our Lives
Presentation transcript:

Casual Tees Hey, What’s Poppins, Mary? Don’t Believe me? It’s Trudeau A is for… Ever Since I left the City You

Tees Corporations that operate in two or more countries…Burger King for example!

Tees This American department store chain – dedicated to providing the lowest prices on products and services – arrived in Canada in 1994.

Tees A visit by this free trade organization in 1999 sparked protests in Seattle.

Tees A business in which employees have formed a union to negotiate on their behalf with management in such matters as pay, working conditions, hours and benefits.

Tees The import and export of goods and services is only the simplest form of global integration of the world’s ______________.

Mary The idea that the entire world and its inhabitants are becoming on large community connected through TV and the internet.

Mary A trend toward uniformity in world popular culture as a result of globalization.

Mary Canada’s national English-language public broadcaster.

Mary This broadcaster attempts to reflect the cultures, languages, and communities of diverse Indigenous peoples across Canada.

Mary The blending of media and communications technologies resulting in new expressions of identity and cross-cultural consumption.

Canada – 100 A society made up of many groups. (Like Canada!)

Canada – 200 One way that Canada recognizes its Francophone and Anglophone heritage through law.

Canada – 300 An ethnic, linguistic, or religious group whose numbers are small compared to the dominant group.

Canada – 400 Incorporating ideas, customs and language from another culture. Anyone want to go tobogganing?

Canada – 500 Government policy that promotes diversity in Canadian society.

A is for The absorption of a minority group by the dominant group.

A is for… An inclusive approach that allows religious or ethnic groups to maintain their distinctive cultures within the mainstream.

A is for… Gradual change as a result of contact with other cultural groups.

A is for… The process of affirming and promoting individual and collective cultural identity. (Doesn’t start with the letter A but has 3 As in it)

A is for… A policy of the South African government from 1948 – 1990 that denied rights to non-whites.

City Large cities…Superman also lives here!

City The growth of towns and cities, as people move from rural areas in search of work and other opportunities.

City The movement of people from one place to another for the purpose of settling in a new location.

City The pushing of a group to the “margins” of society, where they hold little social, political or economic power.

City Urban areas with populations over 10 million.

Missed Steak Transnational Company

Missed Steak Wal-Mart

Missed Steak WTO

Missed Steak Unionized

Missed Steak Economies

Good Morning Global Village

Good Morning Homogenization

Good Morning CBC

Good Morning APTN

Good Morning Hybridization

Canada – 100 Pluralistic Society

Canada – 200 Official Bilingualism

Canada – 300 Minority Group

Canada – 400 Cultural Borrowing

Canada – 500 Multiculturalism

A Assimilation

A Accommodation

A Acculturation

A Cultural Revitalization

Apartheid A -500

City Metropolis

City Urbanization

City Migration

City Marginalization

City Megacities