Primary history- First Contacts
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Rescooped by Catherine Smyth from CCS2.1 Changes to People and Places in Sydney region as a result of British colonisation
onto Primary history- First Contacts
April 18, 2015 3:18 AM
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Indigenous Australia Timeline - 1500 to 1900 - Australian Museum

Indigenous Australia Timeline - 1500 to 1900 - Australian Museum | Primary history- First Contacts | Scoop.it
A timeline of events relating to Indigenous Australians from the time of contact with Indonesian trepang fishermen c.1500-1700 until 1900.

Via Catherine Heil
Catherine Heil's curator insight, March 30, 2015 2:55 AM

This timeline of events relating to Aboriginal people before and after British Colonisation would be a good teaching resource for Stage 2 HSIE students, as well as achieving several Mathematics and English syllabus outcomes.

 

Prior to students engaging with new information, it's important to determine students’ prior learning (Gilbert & Hoepper, 2011, p.68). For example, the teacher could tape a line along the classroom wall that is approx 4 metres long and explain to students that this timeline represents 80, 000 years of Aboriginal people living in Australia. Ask students to indicate by putting marks on the line showing how long Australia has been settled by white people, before explaining that the last centimetre represents the 200 approx. years since British colonisation. Discuss this representation of the colonisation of Australia compared to students’ perception of the length of time. 

 

Using the Australian Museum timeline, the teacher could pick some key events (particularly around 1786 and early 1800s) that created significant change in Sydney and discuss these events with the students (some of the language in the timeline may need to be modified for Stage 2 students). The timeline of events clearly shows evidence that the lives of Aboriginal people were profoundly changed by the arrival of British colonists in 1788. 

 

A lesson idea would be to divide the class into smaller groups, and allocate each  group with a significant event as recorded on the timeline. Instruct students to engage in the process of historical inquiry by conducting further research upon their given event, and to create a summary on A4 paper using both written text and pictures.

 

For example, one group might research the small pox epidemic that occurred in the late 1700’s/early 1800’s that significantly reduced the Aboriginal population, another group could investigate the loss of land and water resources to Aboriginal people due to European settlement, and another group could look at the loss of Aboriginal people through direct fighting with the colonisers. 

 

When students have completed the task, they will be required to place their page summary in the correct chronological order on the timeline on the classroom wall.

 

Evidence of learning would be students understanding the First Fleet landing within the long history of Indigenous Australia, describing some of the consequences of British colonisation for Aboriginal people such as displacement, disease, genocide and war, and also correctly placing historical events in sequential order on the classroom timeline and how they occurred in relation to one another. Students could also assess each other by using a checklist to assess if students have contributed and can work together as a group (Gilbert and Hoepper, 2011, p. 138).

 

REFERENCES:

 

Gilbert, R., Hoepper, B. (eds) (2014). Teaching humanities and social sciences: history, geography, economics and citizenship in the Australian curriculum. South Melbourne: Cengage Learning Australia.

 

NSW Board of Studies (2012) Mathematics K-10 Syllabus, Retrieved March 31, 2015, from http://syllabus.bos.nsw.edu.au/mathematics/

 

 

 

 

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