Canada has Territories because some parts of the country are so big and spread out that they needed special rules to help manage them.
Imagine you have a huge toy box full of different toys, but only a few of them fit in your regular toy room. The rest need their own space, maybe a bigger room or even an extra closet. That’s like what happened with Canada's Territories.
Big Spaces Need Special Rules
The Territories are like those extra closets. They’re not as busy as the provinces, which means they have fewer people and more land to explore. Because of that, they get some special rights and rules, just like how you might get to choose your own bedtime if you clean up your toys quickly.
Some Places Need Extra Care
Canada is so big that it needed extra help to look after all the faraway places. The Territories are like a group of friends who live in the most remote parts of Canada, they need special care and attention because not many people live there, but the land is huge.
So, just like you might need an extra room for your biggest toys, Canada needed Territories to help manage its biggest and farthest places.
Examples
- A child learns why Canada has three territories instead of more provinces.
- A student is told that the territories have fewer rules than provinces.
- A family living in the Northwest Territories feels closer to nature.
Ask a question
See also
- How Does CANADA- Provinces + Territories explained (Geography Now!) Work?
- How Does Brazil: History, Geography, Economy & Culture Work?
- How Does Secret of the Prime Meridian Work?
- What are andes?
- How the Ukraine war gave Canada & Denmark a border?