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How Canada came to be

Nearly 400 children tell Canadaѻýs history through song in just one hour
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Image credit: Jen Zielinski

Our nationѻýs history told through song in just one hour comes alive this week thanks to the voices of nearly 400 Kelowna students.

The Okanagan Symphony Orchestra (OSO) and École Glenmore Elementary have teamed up for the production ѻýHow Canada Came to Beѻý in celebration of Canadaѻýs Sesquicentennial and the OSOѻýs annual Education Week.

This one interactive show took most of the school year to put together and is performed by the children who sing, dance, narrate and even fiddle Canadian stories.

Created nearly 10 years ago by educator Rhonda Draper, who won the Governor Generalѻýs Award for the production, the show helps students learn about culture, art and Canadian history.

ѻýI was inspired to write ѻýHow Canada Came to Beѻý because I wanted children to learn about their Canadian identity, to learn an overview of Canadaѻýs history and to learn how to develop their singing voices through the folk music of their own countryѻý, says Draper.

Rosemary Thomson is OSOѻýs Music Director and says when heard Draper being interviewed on the radio several years ago she knew she had to work with her.

ѻýI said to her we have to do this with the orchestra, so we did it in 2010 for our 50th anniversary for the orchestra and we thought because it is Canadaѻýs 150th birthday that it would be a great year to bring the show back,ѻý explained Thomson.

More than 20 members of OSO join the children for the event, which is held for students in Kelowna, Penticton and Vernon during the week of March 13-16.

ѻýThere isnѻýt a dry eye in the orchestra, they call cry during the show, they are so moved by it,ѻý said Thomson. ѻýIt is so fun to see the kids blossom and when they hear the orchestra they just start to sing differently as well. So, it is a really beautiful partnership.ѻý

The partnership extends beyond the children and the orchestra, to UBC Okanaganѻýs campus after Faculty of Education recently joined on as part of a development project.

The three-year research project will explore how curriculum can draw students into the depth and complexity of learning across all subject matter. Funds to support this project are the result of the school receiving the honour of BC K-12 Innovation Partnership recognition and the universityѻýs receipt of a Social Sciences Humanities Research Council Partnership Development Grant.

The ѻýHow Canada Came To Beѻý public performance will take place in Kelowna on Thursday, March 16 at 6 p.m. (doors open 5:00pm) at Evangel Church, 3261 Gordon Drive.

Tickets can be purchased in advance by phone at 250-763-7544 or



Jen Zielinski

About the Author: Jen Zielinski

I am a broadcast journalism graduate from BCIT and hold a bachelor of arts degree in political science and sociology from Thompson Rivers University. I enjoy volunteering with local organizations, such as the Okanagan Humane Society.
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