Toronto-based photographer and former high school geography and psychology teacher, Colin Boyd Shafer, stopped by National Geographic headquarters to talk about Cosmopolis Toronto, a documentary project that reveals the true diversity of Toronto through photography, stories, and mapping. See ideas below for how you, too, can connect your students to their communities and the world.
Can you find the world in one city?
Inspired by this question, Colin Boyd Shafer set out to photograph and tell the stories of someone born in every country in the world, who now calls Toronto home. In one year, June 2013 – June 2014, Colin traveled the greater Toronto area to take portraits of individuals in a place where they feel ‘at home’ and holding an item that connects them to their past. These photographs below are just some of the stories that are connected through a Google map as part of his latest project, Cosmopolis Toronto.


“Cosmopolis Toronto aims to create an accurate picture of diversity through the unique individuals that make up Toronto today; share compelling personal stories; and create engaging and positive opportunities for dialogue among people from various cultural and social backgrounds.” (http://cosmopolistoronto.com)




Colin began his project by photographing his grandmother, Eileen, who was born in Stoke on Trent, United Kingdom and moved to Toronto in the 1960s. He found most of his participants with the help of social media. Participants found connections and comfort in the series by reading about the similarities many immigrants faced and felt new respect for the uniqueness of their own story.


Colin’s next project is INTERLOVE – a documentary series featuring people who differ in faith but come together in love. Click here to support the project. You can also follow Colin’s work via the Cosmpolis Toronto Facebook page.
This post was written by Alison Szopinski, manager of the Geo-Educator Community at National Geographic. Join the Geo-Educator Community for ideas and resources that help students learn about the world.
TEACHERS’ TOOLKIT
Emulate this project in your classroom:
- Ask the students to share where their family is from (towns, states, countries). How far back do they know?
- Homework Idea: Have students identify where their immediate family currently lives, and where their parents and grandparents are from (town, state, country).
- Create a classroom tree.
- Have students create leaves for each place they found where they have a connection.
- Each student’s name is a branch.
- The tree trunk is your classroom. Any surprises? What do they think of this tree? How many new places can they learn about by sharing family stories with each other?
- Map it with string!
- Have students place pins and small notecards with their name and family connection to that place, on a world map. Include a pin for your classroom location.
- Need a map? Print this one, and turn its assembly into a classroom puzzle.
- See the full NatGeoEd Mapping Collection.
- Have students pick a unique color of string and connect their map pins (embroidery thread works, too!)
- Discuss what the world looks like with the lines and connections.
- Have students place pins and small notecards with their name and family connection to that place, on a world map. Include a pin for your classroom location.
- Ask students to take a photo for class that shows them with a family member and an item of cultural or familial importance. Add these photos to the map or tree above, or simply show n’ tell.
Take it further:
National Geographic Genographic Project: Education Collection
Video: Global Human Journey Geneticists map the human journey out of Africa
Activity (1 hour) for Grades 3-5, Ages 8-11: Migration Around the World
Activity (50 min) for Grades 9-12, Ages 14-18: Exploring Modern Human Migrations
Activity (50 min) for Grades 9-12, Ages 14-18: All Africans under the Skin
Encyclopedic Entry: neighborhood
Encyclopedic Entry: family
Nat Geo Blog (10/17/2013) Chinatowns Threatened by Gentrification
Nat Geo Blog (04/01/2013) Cholo Universe