Discover Canada: Complete Chapter-by-Chapter Summary

The "Discover Canada" guide is the only official document to prepare for the Canadian citizenship test. Its 63 pages cover everything you need to know. This summary condenses the essential information from each chapter. For complete test preparation, also read our complete 2026 citizenship test guide.

20
questions on the test
75%
minimum score (15/20)
30-45
minutes to complete
10
chapters to master
Chapter 1

The Oath of Citizenship

The oath is a solemn promise of loyalty to Canada's Sovereign.

  • You pledge allegiance to His Majesty King Charles III, King of Canada
  • The oath recognizes Aboriginal and treaty rights of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples
  • Canada is a constitutional monarchy where the Sovereign personifies Canada
  • Loyalty is to a person (the Sovereign), not abstract concepts
Chapter 2

Rights and Responsibilities of Citizenship

The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (1982) is part of an 800-year tradition of ordered liberty dating back to the Magna Carta (1215). Read our article on citizens' rights and responsibilities for a deeper dive into this chapter.

The 4 Fundamental Freedoms

  • Freedom of conscience and religion
  • Freedom of thought, belief, opinion, and expression
  • Freedom of peaceful assembly
  • Freedom of association

Citizenship Responsibilities

  • Obey the law — rule of law applies to everyone
  • Take responsibility for yourself and your family
  • Serve on a jury when called
  • Vote in elections
  • Volunteer in the community
  • Protect heritage — natural and cultural resources

Did You Know?

There is no compulsory military service in Canada. Volunteering with the Canadian Forces or emergency services is valued but not mandatory.

Chapter 3

Who We Are

Canada has three founding peoples: Aboriginal, French, and English.

Aboriginal Peoples (3 Groups)

  • First Nations — ~65% of Aboriginal population; about 600 communities
  • Métis — ~30%; mixed ancestry; mainly in Prairie provinces; speak Michif
  • Inuit — ~4%; Arctic communities; "Inuit" means "the people"

Language Statistics

  • 18 million Anglophones
  • 7 million Francophones
  • Chinese languages are most spoken at home after English
Chapter 4

Canada's History

This chapter covers major events from European exploration to today.

The 15 Essential Dates

DateEvent
1215Magna Carta signed
1497John Cabot maps Atlantic coast
1534Jacques Cartier — first voyage; origin of name "Canada"
1608Champlain founds Quebec City
1759Battle of the Plains of Abraham
1774Quebec Act — religious freedom for Catholics
1812War of 1812 against the United States
1867Confederation — July 1st, Canada Day
1885CPR railway completed (November 7)
1917Battle of Vimy Ridge (April 9)
1918Women's right to vote (federal)
1944D-Day — Canadians land on Juno Beach
1982Charter of Rights and Freedoms
1999Nunavut created
2008Apology for residential schools

Key Historical Figures

PersonImportance
Sir John A. MacdonaldFirst PM; Father of Confederation; on $10 bill
Samuel de ChamplainFounded Quebec (1608); "Father of New France"
Sir Wilfrid LaurierFirst French-Canadian PM; on $5 bill
Louis RielMétis leader; rebellions of 1869 and 1885
Agnes MacphailFirst woman MP (1921)
Terry FoxMarathon of Hope (1980)

Did You Know?

During World War I, 600,000 Canadians served from a population of 8 million. 60,000 were killed and 170,000 wounded. November 11 is Remembrance Day.

Chapter 5

Modern Canada

  • 1947 — Oil discovered in Alberta at Leduc
  • 1969 — Official Languages Act
  • 1980 — "O Canada" becomes official anthem
  • 1965 — Current maple leaf flag adopted

Famous Canadian Inventors

  • Alexander Graham Bell — telephone concept
  • Joseph-Armand Bombardier — snowmobile
  • Sir Sandford Fleming — worldwide time zones
  • Frederick Banting & Charles Best — insulin (16 million lives saved)
  • James Naismith — basketball (1891)
Chapter 6

How Canadians Govern Themselves

Canada rests on three pillars: Federal state, parliamentary democracy, constitutional monarchy. Our article on Canada's government system details each institution.

Division of Powers

FederalProvincialShared
Defence, foreign policyEducation, healthcareAgriculture
Criminal law, citizenshipNatural resourcesImmigration
Currency, bankingHighways, civil rights

Three Branches of Government

  • Executive — Prime Minister and Cabinet
  • Legislative — Parliament (House of Commons + Senate)
  • Judicial — Courts
Chapter 7

Federal Elections

  • Elections on the third Monday of October, every 4 years
  • 338 electoral districts (ridings)
  • Voting age: 18 years old
  • Voting is by secret ballot
  • Majority government = party with 50%+ of seats
  • Minority government = party with less than 50%
Chapter 8

The Justice System

To go deeper on this chapter, read our article on Canada's justice system.

  • Rule of law — everyone, including government, must obey the law
  • Presumption of innocence — innocent until proven guilty
  • Supreme Court of Canada — highest court
  • RCMP — federal police; serves as provincial police everywhere except Ontario and Quebec
Chapter 9

Canadian Symbols

SymbolKey Fact
Maple Leaf FlagAdopted 1965; red and white official since 1921
Maple LeafSymbol since the 1700s
BeaverOn the 5-cent coin
"O Canada"Official anthem since 1980; first sung in Quebec 1880
Coat of ArmsMotto: "A Mari Usque Ad Mare" (From sea to sea)
Victoria CrossHighest honour; 96 Canadians have received it
Chapter 10

Canada's Regions

Canada is the 2nd largest country in the world (~10 million km²), bordered by 3 oceans: Pacific, Atlantic, and Arctic.

The 5 Geographic Regions

RegionProvinces/TerritoriesKey Fact
AtlanticNL, PEI, NS, NBNB is only officially bilingual province
CentralQuebec, OntarioOntario = most populous (12+ million)
PrairiesManitoba, Saskatchewan, AlbertaSaskatchewan = breadbasket of the world
West CoastBritish ColumbiaPort of Vancouver = Pacific gateway
NorthYukon, NWT, NunavutNunavut created 1999; 85% Inuit

Study Tip: Focus first on dates, historical figures, and government structure — these are the most tested topics. Then review symbols and regions. Practice with our 50 hardest citizenship test questions and read about elections and voting in Canada for Chapter 7.

Download the Official Guide

The Discover Canada guide is available for free as a PDF on the Government of Canada website. An audio version is also available for those who prefer listening.

Download the official guide (canada.ca)

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