Primary history- First Contacts
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Rescooped by Catherine Smyth from Changes to people and places in the Sydney region as a result of British Colonisation
onto Primary history- First Contacts
May 20, 2014 10:51 PM
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A day in the life of a convict

A day in the life of a convict | Primary history- First Contacts | Scoop.it
A convict’s life depended on who they worked for, where they worked and the kind of skills they had to offer.

Via Maria Kritsotakis
Maria Kritsotakis's curator insight, April 3, 2014 8:25 AM

Along with the British Colonisation of Australia came the convicts too. No longer accepted in America after The War of Independence ended, NSW was the answer to the problem for Britain.This site from Sydney Living Museums in conjunction with Historical Houses Trust of NSW focuses on convict life at Hyde Park Barracks. Hyde Park Barracks is heritage listed as one of the most significant convict sites in the world.This is an excellent resource for teachers and students. Children will enjoy this site which includes lots of photos, clear and concise accounts of the daily life of the convicts, actual newspaper articles about them and videos . Excursions can be  arranged to Hyde Park Barracks to visit the convict museum which runs educational programs that are directed at stage 2 and 3 and are  aligned with the HSIE curriculum.

 

There are numerous teaching activities that can be inspired by this subject. Recording the differences between a convicts clothing and our own today looking at the food they ate and  the food we eat, setting up a mock trial in small groups and determining punishments for the crimes, are but a few suggestions. For a more formal assessment children could research female convicts ( as Hyde Park Barracks was home to male convicts only) and present their findings to the class in a short five minute oral presentation where they would report on the female convicts clothing, crime and punishment, what type of labour they were sentenced to and what became of them if and when they were released ( The National Library of Australia, 2014).

 

 

References.

 

The National Library of Australia. (2014). Retrieved from

Treasure Explorer http://treasure-explorer.nla.gov.au/explore/treasures

Kimberley Barcenilla's curator insight, May 31, 2018 7:37 PM
This resource provides a curriculum-based program that is focused on student-centred learning where students are able to discover and explore the historical evidence by exploring the heritage site of Hyde Park Barracks. 

- Gives student's an opportunity to investigate primary sources in an extremely tangible and interactive way.
- First hand stories from convicts who lived at the barracks, developing skills in empathetic understanding      
- Concrete way to stimulate curiosity.
- The opportunity to combine student-lived experiences with imaginative reconstruction which can help develop a capacity to use evidence in reasoned argument in disciplinary inquiry (Taylor et al., 2012, pp. 151)
- Differing views: life for convicts versus life for Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander people
- Investigate the impact of convict settlement on Indigenous people.
- Opportunity for students to see, think and wonder.


What do you think was here before the barracks?


Outcomes:

- Describes people, events and actions related to world exploration and its effects (HT2-3)
- Applies skills of historical inquiry and communication (HT2-5)
- Stories of the First Fleet, including reasons for the journey, who travelled to Australia, and their experiences following arrival (ACHHK079)


References:

Taylor, T., Fahey, C., Kriewaldt, J. & Boon, D. (2012). Place and Time. Explorations in Teaching Geography and History. Frenchs Forest: Pearson Australia
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