describe some significant developments in the rights and lives of women in Canada, including First Nations, Métis, and Inuit women, during this period (e.g., women's contribution to the war effort, their expanding role in the workplace, and the impact of these on their role in the family and in society; the role of Inuit women in the whaling and sealskin industry; women's role in suffrage, temperance, and other social movements; repercussions of the loss of status for First Nations women whose husbands were enfranchised because of wartime service; new political rights for some women; changing social mores in the 1920s and their impact on women; the participation of women in organized sports), and explain the impact of these developments on Canadian citizenship and/or heritage
Standard detail
10.B3.3
Depth 2Parent ID: D3BA215CFE3F481BA8F7F03F4F540F0AStandard set: Grade 10 - Canadian History since World War I CHC2D (2018)
Original statement
Quick facts
- Statement code
- 10.B3.3
- List ID
- c
- Standard ID
- 9AC3FC27EEF84656902A286ED66DE885
- Subject
- Canadian and World Studies
- Grades
- 10
- Ancestor IDs
- D3BA215CFE3F481BA8F7F03F4F540F0A93F1209AA2A14D35AFFB93784550787D
- Source document
- Grade 10 - Canadian History since World War I CHC2D (2018)
- License
- CC BY 4.0 US