Unless otherwise noted within this book, this book is released under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License also known as a CC-BY license. This means you are free to copy, redistribute, modify or adapt this book. Under this license, anyone who redistributes or modifies this textbook, in whole or in part, can do so for free providing they properly attribute the book.
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For questions regarding this license, please contact opentext@bccampus.ca . To learn more about the B.C. Open Textbook project, visit http://open.bccampus.ca .
Cover image: Val’s Garden by Carlee Ashton Diabo is used under a CC-BY 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
BC Reads: Adult Literacy Fundamental English - Reader 1 by Shantel Ivits is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
BC Reads: Adult Literacy Fundamental English – Reader 1 was created by Shantel Ivits. This creation is a part of the B.C. Open Textbook project.
The B.C. Open Textbook project began in 2012 with the goal of making post-secondary education in British Columbia more accessible by reducing student cost through the use of openly licensed textbooks. The B.C. Open Textbook project is administered by BCcampus and funded by the British Columbia Ministry of Advanced Education.
Open textbooks are open educational resources (OER); they are instructional resources created and shared in ways so that more people have access to them. This is a different model than traditionally copyrighted materials. OER are defined as teaching, learning, and research resources that reside in the public domain or have been released under an intellectual property license that permits their free use and re-purposing by others (Hewlett Foundation).
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These books were developed on the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh Nations. Huy tseep q’u! Chen kw’enmántumiyap! Kw’as hoy!
I feel very fortunate to have had the opportunity to work on this project alongside a dedicated team of basic education instructors from across British Columbia. This series was shepherded by Leanne Caillier-Smith (College of the Rockies) and benefited enormously from the insight and encouragement of Julia Dodge (University of the Fraser Valley), Chandra McCann (Okanagan College), Jan Weiten (Vancouver Community College), and Melinda Worfolk (College of New Caledonia). The above five mentioned are representatives of the BC Adult Literacy Articulation Committee and were the advisory committee members for this project. It has been a pleasure to scaffold my own learning among such brilliant and passionate educators.
Huge thanks to Lauri Aesoph of BCcampus for introducing me to the exciting open textbook movement and managing all aspects of the publication of these books — from layout and image selection to copyediting and print –so adeptly.
I am incredibly lucky to work with and have the support of the Basic Education Department at Vancouver Community College: Rita Acton, Cynthia Bluman, Andrew Candela, Lynn Horvat, Alayna Kruger, Jo Lemay, Edie Mackenzie, Rene Merkel, Tara Mollel, Leah Rasmussen, Linda Rider, Mary Thompson-Boyd, Jan Weiten, and our Dean, David Wells. I am also deeply grateful to the basic education students at Vancouver Community College for all that you teach me about dreams, resilience, and perseverance.
A special thank you to my partner, Marria, for always lending my words an eager ear, and for keeping the world around me turning even though my head was perpetually stuck in these books.
I have often struggled to find reading materials that rise to the wisdom that Level 1 learners so often bring to the classroom, while still drawing on plain language. So I sought to write texts about things that really matter: healing, discovery, survival, relationships, justice, and connection to the land. I explored these themes through the lens of the plant world.
This reader contains nine original stories written specifically for adults and is designed to accompany the BC Reads: Adult Literacy Fundamental English – Course Pack 1. This level 1 reader, one of a series of six readers, is roughly equivalent to beginner to Grade 1.5 in the K-12 system.
Font size and line spacing can be adjusted in the online view and have been enhanced for the print and PDF versions for easier reading. This reader has been reviewed by subject experts from colleges and universities.
I hope these pages help ignite in your students a lifelong love of reading and discovery.
-Shantel Ivits
Max used to live on the street. Now he lives in a house for other kids from the street.
One of the workers at the house is named Dan. Dan is Cree like Max.
One day, Dan takes Max to pick sweetgrass. They walk out onto the wetland. The sweetgrass is very tall. It bends when they step on it. But it does not break. Dan says, “The sweetgrass tells us to be kind when we are hurt.”
Dan asks the sweetgrass if he can pick it. Then Dan and Max pick what they need. They leave the roots in the land. This way, the sweetgrass will grow again next year.
After that, they make the sweetgrass into a braid. Dan tells Max that sweetgrass takes away bad feelings. It makes room for happy feelings. So Max keeps the sweetgrass close.
My grandma has never been on a plane. But she gets on a plane when she is 82 years old. She gets on a plane to see me.
One day, we go for a walk. She likes the flowers on my street.
Back home, she has many garden beds. She is in three flower clubs. She puts her plants in flower shows. She knows a lot about flowers.
But today she sees a flower she has not seen before. “What is this?” Grandma asks.
My friend Dave knows. He tells her what the flower is. She looks at Dave for a long time.
Back home, men hunt.
Back home, men fish.
Back home, men farm.
But back home, men do not know about flowers.
She hopes to see more flowers she has never seen before.
This is Meg. Meg lives in South Africa. She has three kids.
It is hard to feed her kids. White people own most of the farmland in South Africa. Meg does not have land for a garden. Food costs a lot of money.
But Meg has a very good way to grow food. She finds a big sack. She puts rocks in the middle of the sack. She fills the rest of the sack with dirt. She makes little holes in the side of the sack. She puts a tomato plant in one hole. She puts a bean plant in one hole. She puts a green pepper plant in one hole. She puts eggplant in the top of the sack. She waters the sack garden from the top.
Her garden does not need much water. Her garden does not need much room. Her garden does not cost much money to make. Her garden does not have many weeds.
Now Meg can feed her kids.
Then a family moves next door. They are new to the city. They do not know anyone. And I give them a big box of vegetables from Val’s garden.
What is GM food? All living things have DNA. DNA tells living things how to grow. These days, people can change the DNA that tells food how to grow. When people change the DNA of food, it is called GM food.
Some GM food can grow in cold weather. GM food can stop bugs from eating it. GM fruits and vegetables can stay good longer. One day, GM food may be able to grow in dry land in Africa. It will feed people who do not have much food.
But there is a lot we do not know about GM food. Will GM companies help poor people grow food? Or do GM companies just want to get rich? Does GM food kill bugs we need, like butterflies? Does GM food make birds sick? Does GM food make people sick? We do not know. There have not been many tests on GM food.
Do you think farmers should grow GM food?
The tomato is from South America. When the tomato came to Europe, people did not eat it. Doctors said it would make them sick. So people just grew tomatoes because they looked nice.
Now people from all over the world eat tomatoes. Tomatoes are used in sauce, soup, juice, salsa, and ketchup. The tomato is very good for you. Only a tomato leaf or stem will make you sick.
People do odd things with tomatoes. People grow tomatoes in space. There is a big tomato fight every year in Spain. A long time ago, people would toss a bad tomato when they saw a show they did not like.
In Canada, many tomatoes are grown on big farms. The farms bring in poor people from far away to help grow tomatoes. Without these workers, the farms could not run. But the workers do not get much money. Canada does not let the workers stay here. Many people say this is not fair.
Most farms pick tomatoes before they are ripe. They last longer this way. But these tomatoes do not taste as good. So lots of people grow their own tomatoes.
Tomatoes that you grow are better than tomatoes that you buy. You can grow tomatoes inside if you do not have a garden.
You need:
Tomato seeds
A big pot (50 cm deep)
Potting soil (many big food shops sell this)
A window
Fill the pot with potting soil. Pack the soil down a little bit. Put a seed on top of the soil. Add a bit more soil on top.
Add water. The soil must always be a bit wet. Seeds like to be warm. Put your pot in a warm place. It does not need sun yet.
Pick the tomatoes when they are the same red colour top to bottom. Enjoy!
A man named Randy liked to hunt trees. He looked for big trees and old trees. He made maps to show where these trees were. He did not want to cut them down. He wanted people to take care of them.
But someone else found it first. It was found by a logger. Loggers wanted to cut down Canada’s tallest tree and all the trees around it.
Randy made a path in the forest so people could see the tall tree. The tree was so big and beautiful it would fill them with awe. More and more people wanted to save that forest. Thanks to these people, that forest is now a park. Canada’s tallest tree is still there.
There may still be a bigger tree out there. Maybe you will find it. But there are only a few old forests left in BC. Many are still at risk of being cut down.
Some plants grow in land that is rich. Some plants grow where there is a lot of sun. These plants do very well. But there is something beautiful about plants that grow against the odds.
Way up in the arctic, the land is cold and hard. The winter is long and dark. But the arctic plants find a way to get by.
Summer comes for just a few weeks. The ice turns to water. Plants begin to grow.
Arctic moss grows on the land. It adds a bit of heat so that other plants can grow, too.
In other places, trees try to grow to the sky. But they would not last in the arctic. So the arctic willow is not like the other trees. The arctic willow grows on its side. It grows along the land. This may be odd, but it works.
The sun is out all day and all night. But the sun will go away soon. So the arctic poppy always looks on the bright side. The arctic poppy always faces the sun.
Yes, there is something beautiful about plants that grow against the odds.
All drawings in Sweetgrass are by Carlee Ashton Diabo and are used under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.
My grandma by skeeze is in the public domain.
One day by Yeongkyu is in the public domain.
Back home is by Shantel Ivits and is used under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.
But today is by Shantel Ivits and is used under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.
My friend by Leo Rey is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Back home, men hunt by jackmac34 is in the public domain.
Back home, men fish by LoveToTakePhotos is in the public domain.
Back home, men farm by PublicDomainImages is in the public domain.
But back home by teacherr31 is in the public domain.
She takes is by Shantel Ivits and is used under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.
She hopes is by Shantel Ivits and is used under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.
All drawings in The Sack Garden are by Carlee Ashton Diabo and are used under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.
All drawings in Val’s Garden are by Carlee Ashton Diabo and are used under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.
It is hard by United Soybean Board is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
What is GM food by felixioncool is in the public domain.
Some GM food by Don Graham is used under a CC BY SA 3.0 license.
But there by Rosalee Yagihara is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Do you think by U.S. Department of Agriculture is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
The tomato by Jane is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Now people by Hector Alejandro is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
People do odd by Diariocritico de Venezuela is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
In Canada by U.S. Department of Agriculture is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Most farms by Suzette is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Tomatoes that you by Avi is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Fill the pot by Carol VanHook is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Add water by stux is in the public domain.
The plant will grow by Adam Raoof is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Pick the tomatoes by Procsilas Moscas is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
A man named by Unsplash is in the public domain.
Randy was told by Ademoor is used under a CC BY 2.5 license.
But someone else by macinate is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Randy made by Adam Walker is used under a CC BY SA 3.0 license.
There may still is in the public domain.
Some plants by distelpics is in the public domain.
Way up in the arctic by Doc Searls is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Summer comes by Mike Beauregard is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Arctic moss by Kitty Terwolbeck is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Arctic plants stay together by Madhav Pai is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
In other places by Alexandre Lavrov is used under a CC BY 2.0 license.
The sun by Ansgar Walk is used under a CC BY SA 3.0 license.
Yes, there is by Ruhrfisch is used under a CC BY SA 3.0 license.
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