Primary history- First Contacts
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Rescooped by Catherine Smyth from HSIE K-6 – Stage 3 – Change and Continuity - CCS3.1 - Significance of particular people, places, groups, actions and events in the past in developing Australian identities and heritage.
onto Primary history- First Contacts
May 9, 2014 11:59 PM
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Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney - Australian Museum

Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney - Australian Museum | Primary history- First Contacts | Scoop.it
Explore the rich and complex customs of Aboriginal people in the past and the importance of the Harbour in their daily lives. To contemporary Indigenous Australians, Port Jackson has a continuing importance.

Via Jesse Ferris
Jesse Ferris's curator insight, April 13, 2014 7:52 AM

This site can be used as a resource to further build on the work done using the interactive indigenous language map. The resource is a section of The Australian Museum’s website entitled Aboriginal People of Coastal Sydney. There are various categories on the page including ‘Introduction to Aboriginal Sydney’, ‘Research Projects’, ‘Fish and fishing’, ‘Canoes’ and ‘Food from the sea’.

 

Of particular interest though, in relation to the indigenous language map, are the categories ‘Place names’ and ‘Clan names and language groups’. In the ‘Place names’ category there is a place names chart. This chart gives the names of current locations in and around Sydney such as Manly Cove or Chowder Bay and provides the Aboriginal name equivalent for that location. Teachers could provide students with a blank map of Sydney and get groups of students to identify a number of different locations and provide the Aboriginal name for those locations. Then each group could contribute their findings to a large blank map on the wall to provide a detailed map of Sydney with Aboriginal names of every location.

 

This site is also a great resource for painting a broader picture of Aboriginal culture in coastal Sydney in the sense that it explores what the diet of these people were like and how they went about catching their food with traditional fishing gear such as net bags, spears and canoes.

 

To follow on from this activity teachers could invite an Aboriginal community leader form the local area to the school. The community leader could potentially teach the class a traditional song, sung in their native language. Once students had learned the traditional song, they could perform it to another class or in school assembly. This activity would satisfy outcomes in the creative arts syllabus under MUS3.1. Students could then hold an interview with the community leader, asking any questions they have in regards to Indigenous culture. This activity would also satisfy ‘Speaking and Listening’ outcomes for stage 3 in the English syllabus.

Primary history- First Contacts
Teaching resources, ideas and links for the Stage 2 Australian curriculum topic "First Contacts". In this topic, students describe people, events and actions related to world exploration and its effects, describe and explain effects of British colonisation in Australia and apply skills of historical inquiry and communication
Curated by Catherine Smyth