Social Studies Grade 10: Geographic Issues of the 21st Century
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Invention of combine part reaps recognition in Time
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025It’s easy to take arts and culture for granted. Not because they don’t matter, but because they’re woven so deeply into our daily lives.
They’re in the stories we tell, the music in our earbuds, the festivals that bring neighbours into the streets and the murals that brighten our downtowns.
Arts and culture are part of who we are as Manitobans.
But the arts aren’t just “nice to have.” They’re essential. Especially right now.
No dog? No problem: Local program offers offices pup for a day
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025Trustees want say in school zone redesign
5 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 31, 2025First Nations accuse Hydro, province, feds of profiting from land
2 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025Two First Nations are suing Manitoba Hydro and the provincial and federal governments, claiming the institutions have made billions of dollars through hydroelectric operations on land the communities never agreed to cede.
In a statement of claim filed last week in the Court of King’s Bench, Canupawakpa Dakota Nation and Dakota Tipi First Nation in southern Manitoba are seeking damages for alleged infringement on their rights.
The court filing accuses the public utility, the province and the federal government of breaching duties owed to the Dakota nations and of unjustly enriching themselves at the expense of the communities, without consultation.
“The yearly revenue Manitoba Hydro produces from the land and particularly, the activities, is substantial,” reads the lawsuit.
A century later, Ukrainian church still helping new Ukrainians
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025Forum Art Centre and the art of neighbourhood life
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025The road not taken: lowest number of Manitobans in three decades cross border at Pembina in July, August
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025Roasters and cafés grapple with rising coffee bean prices
4 minute read Preview Monday, Oct. 6, 2025Silenced no more: Indigenous languages celebrated at site of former residential school
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 30, 20252025: a summer of interesting urban changes
5 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 29, 2025Big Tobacco and Big Oil are eerily similar. One knowingly produces a product that slowly but surely kills its consumers. The other knowingly produces a product that surely but not slowly kills the planet.
Foraging revival: How wild food enthusiasts are reconnecting with nature
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025Another subdivision, another city problem
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025Ralliers decry Kinew’s pro-pipeline policy
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 20, 2025St. Boniface residents drained after demolition of Happyland pool
5 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 19, 2025Province creates hunting buffer zone on Bloodvein First Nation
3 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 15, 2025Prairie harvest a mixed bag as tariff strife casts shadow over healthy crop
6 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025Local engineer was a real game changer
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 13, 2025Worse-for-wear riverwalk a victim of total neglect
5 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 5, 2025The Canadian government, mining and human rights
5 minute read Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025Environmentally speaking, foreign mining companies are often more concerned about extracting profits than they are about protecting the local ecological space. There have been innumerable cases of these extractive businesses releasing dangerous chemical pollutants into the air, causing physical damage to nearby homes through soil and bedrock disturbances and dumping mining effluent that poisons local drinking water systems.
Un nouveau souffle pour les paroisses
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025Brian Nguyen: quatre langues et un foyer
4 minute read Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025Brian Nguyen est arrivé au Manitoba en 2021 pour y étudier. Vietnamien d’origine, ce jeune homme, qui parle quatre langues, s’investit aujourd’hui avec passion auprès de la communauté francophone.
Si Nhat (Brian) Nguyen est au comptoir du Café Postal sur le Boulevard Provencher. On est en fin de semaine, au début du mois d’avril, et le soleil se montre enfin un peu. Un grand café crème et un large sourire à emporter, s’il vous plaît, de l’autre côté de la rue, à la Maison des artistes visuels francophones (MDA).
Brian Nguyen y travaille, à temps partiel, depuis son arrivée à Winnipeg, en 2021.
En prenant le bus un jour, il passe devant l’ancien hôtel de ville et son jardin de sculpture. Instinctivement, il est sorti à l’arrêt suivant.