Voiceless' APE (Animal Protection Education) Resources
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Voiceless's Animal Protection Education (APE) encourages students to think critically about animal protection by providing teachers with the information and tools they need to deliver complete lessons in the classroom.
APEs are the go-to resource for educators worldwide looking for professional, mainstream, educational animal protection content at no cost.
They are aligned with the year 7-10 Australian Curriculum and developed in collaboration with experienced high-school teachers.
Voiceless's Animal Protection Education (APE) encourages students to think critically about animal protection by providing teachers with the information and tools they need to deliver complete lessons in the classroom.
APEs are the go-to resource for educators worldwide looking for professional, mainstream, educational animal protection content at no cost.
They are aligned with the year 7-10 Australian Curriculum and developed in collaboration with experienced high-school teachers.
Created by Voiceless, the animal protection institute, Animal Protection Education (APE) provides students and teachers with the information they need to understand and discuss the concept of granting legal personhood status to animals.
With all the resources linked to the Australian Curriculum, teachers from a range of subjects are able to educate high school students from Years 7-10. APEs are designed to promote critical thinking through scientifically backed research coupled with a variety of classroom activities.
The Legal Personhood Fact Sheet provides all the information that teachers need to facilitate lessons on the concept of legal personhood in the classroom.
Accompanying resources include:
Lesson plans for Geography, English and Civics and Citizenship subjects;
Infographic;
Worksheets with accompanying activities;
Video with worksheet;
Podcast with worksheet;
Quizlet
Research Methods Power Point
Glossary
To access the other resources for this unit, visit the Voiceless website.
Subscribe to the Voiceless Mailing List to stay up to date with upcoming APE releases.
This Australian Curriculum alignment statement is based on the Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA) materials, which are licensed under CC BY 4.0. The material has been modified from the Australian Curriculum website (accessed January 2020).
All activities have been created by educators for educators and are linked to the Australian Curriculum (Version 8.4). We advise teachers to consult the ACARA website for the most up-to-date curriculum outcomes.
Created by Voiceless, the animal protection institute, Animal Protection Education (APE) resources provide students and teachers with the information they need to understand how animal cruelty can be measured and compared between countries around the world.
In these lessons, students will use the Voiceless Animal Cruelty Index (VACI) to question, consider and discuss how animal cruelty is produced, consumed and sanctioned in 50 countries. Through this online, interactive index, students will compare the statistics and rankings given to individual countries and will use this information to think critically about what constitutes animal cruelty.
With all the resources linked to the Australian Curriculum, teachers from a range of subjects are able to educate high school students in Years 9-10.
Accompanying resources include:
Video with accompanying transcript;
3x Lesson plans for Geography, Civics and Design and Technology;
Student worksheets with accompanying activities;
Glossary and Quiz;
Animal Protection Encyclopedia.
Access the other resources for the Voiceless Comparing Cruelty APE here.
Subscribe to the Voiceless Education Mailing List to stay up to date with future APE releases.
This Australian Curriculum alignment statement is based on the Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA) materials, which are licensed under CC BY 4.0. The material has been modified from the Australian Curriculum website (accessed January 2020).
All activities have been created by educators for educators and are linked to the Australian Curriculum (Version 8.4). We advise teachers to consult the ACARA website for the most up-to-date curriculum outcomes.