Demography
Immigration to Canada
Population Pyramids
Indigenous Peoples
Math and Vocabulary
100

What is the term for number of births per 1000 people in a year?

Birth Rate

100

What is the difference between immigration and emigration?

Immigration is moving into a country; emigration is leaving a country.

100

What shape of pyramid represents a stable population?

Bell-shaped

100

What term refers to the original peoples of Canada?

Indigenous Peoples (First Nations, Inuit, Métis)

100

What does “PGR” stand for?

Population Growth Rate

200

What is the rule of 70 used to calculate?

Doubling Time

200

 What is a pull factor? Give an example.

A reason to move to a country, such as better job opportunities.

200

Describe what a declining population pyramid looks like.

Inverted pyramid (lots of old people, less young people and declining working adults)

200

Why have some Indigenous people moved to urban areas?

For education, employment, healthcare, or housing.

200

 How do you calculate doubling time using the Rule of 70?

70 ÷ Growth Rate

300

What does a high dependency load mean for a population?

 A large percentage of the population is either too young or too old to work, placing economic pressure on the working population.

300

What is Canada’s migration policy called?

Multiculturalism Policy

300

 What type of pyramid is associated with high birth rates and a young population?

Expansive pyramid

300

Name one challenge faced by isolated Indigenous communities.

Lack of access to healthcare, clean water, or proper housing.

300

What is the difference between a push and a pull factor?

 Push factors drive people away (e.g. war), pull factors attract people (e.g. safety).

400

Name one cause and one effect of the world population reaching 8 billion.

Cause: Improved healthcare. Effect: Increased strain on natural resources.

400

Where do most immigrants to Canada settle and why?

 Major cities like Toronto and Vancouver, due to job opportunities, family networks, and services.

400

What can a country learn by studying its population pyramid?

Age distribution, growth trends, and potential economic pressures

400

What trends are seen in First Nations population growth?

The population is growing faster than the general Canadian population.

400

What department conducts the Canadian census and how often?

 Statistics Canada; every 5 years.

500

Explain how the Rate of Natural Increase (RNI) is calculated.

RNI = Birth Rate - Death Rate

500

 What was the Chinese Head Tax, and why was it introduced?

A tax Chinese immigrants had to pay to enter Canada, intended to discourage Chinese immigration.

500

Draw or describe what Canada’s population pyramid looks like today and explain what it tells us.

Mostly stable with slight aging; shows a larger older population and fewer births, indicating an aging population.

500

How does migration differ for Indigenous peoples compared to newcomers?

 Indigenous migration is often internal, connected to colonial policies and access to services rather than voluntary movement.

500

 Solve: If birth rate = 12, death rate = 9, immigration = 6, emigration = 4, what is the Population Growth Rate?

 RNI = 12 - 9 = 3; NMR = 6 - 4 = 2; PGR = 3 + 2 = 5