Create your own Aboriginal Art style patterns and critical analysis of an artwork using the formal elements. A4 or A3 sized colour printing recommended. Please leave feedback if you download this resource.
A collection of NAIOC Week editable templates to use in your child's portfolio/learning stories. Insert your own photos and write and edit your text. Print off and add to your portfolios.
This poster is part of a series demonstrating how the techniques of visual literacy can be applied in every subject so that students can deconstruct a visual image in order to find the hidden meanings behind the image. In this poster a screen shot of computer screen demonstrates the use of pose, lighting and tone, mood and atmosphere and audience. Visual literacy is a great way to help students build extended responses. There is a template on the second page that can be used as a scaffold.
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Aboriginal Australian Animals Outline
-Australia is home to an extraordinary variety of wildlife, and this captivating set of animals highlights many of them : Koala, Kangaroo,Echidna,Emu,Platypus,Dingo and Wombat…
You can use these australian animal templates as a life science extension activity when studying either wild or domesticated animals. The coloring pages can help your children learn to recognize and identify different animals. Children can then add the unique features of the animals to the templates. Once the masterpieces are finished, you can view them to check your students’ comprehension of animal characteristics.
Alternatively, why not use these animal coloring pages alongside your lessons to encourage your students to walk on the wild side and explore their creativity?
The Australian Animal Outline Templates are also a helpful way for you to encourage your students to work on different drawing techniques and build fine motor skills.
The completed pictures can then be proudly displayed around the classroom, placed in a science lab journal, or added to an art portfolio.
Files Details :
-10 Image 300 HQ SIZED 8.5X11 INCHES,for easy integration into your projects.
-1 PDF HQ 10 Page in Total .
-with thick black lines for easy resizing and crisp, clear prints at any size.
USE THESE FOR:
-Pencil Control Worksheets.
-Animals Worksheet
-Fast Finishers.
-Morning Work.
-Kangaroo Coloring Pages.
-Cute Animals Coloring Book.
-Homework.
-Distance Learning.
Myths and Legends KS3 English lesson that uses an Aboriginal dreamtime story to help students understand what a moral is and also how to analyse a text for language techniques and their impact on the reader. Useful for looking at Myths and Legends, genre, character , language analysis and moving KS3 students towards English Language exams at GCSE. Includes a model example, differentiated activities and so much more.
Useful preparation for both Section A and Question 5 of GCSE English Language exams, but designed for KS3 students. Includes teacher and student notes.
Check out our English Shop for loads more free and inexpensive KS3, KS4, KS5, Literacy and whole school resources.
This lesson forms part of our KS3 Complete Pack. Find out more here.
AQA English Language Paper 1 and Paper 2 Knowledge Organisers
AQA English Language Paper 1 Section A package
AQA English Language Paper 1 Sections A and B package
AQA English Language Paper 1 package
AQA English Language Paper 2 Question 5 package
AQA English Language Paper 1 Question 5 package
AQA English Language Paper 2 Section A package
AQA English Language and English Literature revision package
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An Inspector Calls revision package
Macbeth whole scheme package
Macbeth revision package
A Christmas Carol whole scheme package
A Christmas Carol revision package
Jekyll and Hyde whole scheme package
Jekyll and Hyde revision package
Romeo and Juliet whole scheme package
Power and Conflict poetry comparing poems package
Power and Conflict poetry whole scheme package
Love and Relationships poetry whole scheme package
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A brief PowerPoint presentation to introduce Aboriginal art.
The presentation touches on origin, style and purpose along with mentioning how colours, patterns and symbols are used in Aboriginal art.
Suitable for KS1 and KS2 but, it could be used with any age group where a simple introduction to Aboriginal art is required.
This engaging pack is an Integrated Case Study with 50 pages of student activities comparing a traditional indigenous lifestyle with the student’s own lifestyle.
It reviews aspects of self and society that were studied in the early years of learning. The children explore the impact of environment and experience on human behaviour.
The activities contrasts the child’s own lifestyle with that of the modern indigenous family in a remote area of Australia.
The information comes from first hand experience by the author, and includes a variety of images and drawings done within the remote community.
Topics of work, play, living, environment, medicine, language are all covered in this comprehensive introduction to the indigenous way.
I also use a scrapbook of the photos I have from my time in this community. The scrapbook shows daily activities within the community and it is a great resource to use with ‘The Indigenous Way - An Australian Aboriginal Case Study and Activities’
This package includes:
+ Program for unit of work
+ Powerpoint - Charles Perkins and the Freedom Rides
+ Powerpoint - The Stolen Generation
+ Newspaper front page - National shame as UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples rejected by Australia!
+ Video worksheet - First Australians Episode 6: A Fair Deal for a Dark Race
+ Video worksheet - First Australians Episode 7: We Are no Longer Shadows
+ Video worksheet - UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
+ Source Analysis - What was the impact of the 1965 Freedom Rides
+ Source Analysis - What did the 1967 Referendum Actually Achieve?
+ Source Analysis - What really happened at the Kinchela Boys Home?
+ Source Analysis - Why did Aboriginal people set up a Tent Embassy in 1972?
+ Source Analysis - What were the causes and effects of the 1938 Day of Mourning?
+ Source Analysis - Why did the Gurindji people walk off the Wave Hill Pastoral Station in 1966?
+ Worksheet - Historical Perspectives: The Stolen Generation
+ Mix and match activity - Key words and concepts
+ Word Search - Aboriginal Rights and Freedoms
+ Mind map: Rights of the Child
+ Literacy activity: Assimilation
+ Sequence the events
+ 3 Cloze activities
+ Walk in his/her shoes - empathetic task
This resource is ideal for teaching children about Aboriginal art and using patterns and symbols.
Children will first learn about Aboriginal x-ray art, complete a worksheet where they practice creating Aboriginal style patterns and motifs and then be guided to create their own piece of Aboriginal style artwork based on a fish.
This is a full resource that includes:
Lesson plan
Introduction to Aboriginal x-ray art presentation
Worksheet (differentiated)
Fish templates
X-ray examples
Activity instruction presentation
I have used this successfully with years 1 and 2 and children have produced really nice artwork that can be hung on the wall.
The main activity is written for children to use crayons but, chalk, pastel or paint could also be used. Otherwise minimal supplies are needed- pencils, erasers and black paper.
Another more general Aboriginal Art presentation is also available https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/resource-11902001
This is a program to accompany a unit of work on the topic Aboriginal Rights and Freedoms from the NSW History K-10 Syllabus for the Australian Curriculum.
Stage 5
Depth Study 4: Rights and Freedoms
This teaching pack / study guide will take your students through a critical study of Aboriginal texts/ Indigenous Australian literature.
Jack Davis, Stan Grant, Blackfella films.
Poetry, speech, film and media.
Do you want your students to engage more intimately with Australian history and the Indigenous experience?
If you are trying to engage your students to develop a deeper, more nuanced understanding of Aboriginal Australia, this is the bundle for you. These lessons form a part of a unit on Indigenous literature. This unit was designed to help students learn empathy through the stories and lives of others, whilst deconstructing texts to learn how language shapes the delivery of the message.
With a total of 57 slides, this bundle took my lower to mixed ability Year 10 class approximately 6-7 weeks.
***Jack Davis Resource:
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This is a poetry study with a heavy emphasis on historical context and poetic devices.
You can expect:
Prediction activities
Context (personal, historical, socio-political)
Language analysis: Scaffolded guidance, language techniques and key questions included.
Video links
Discussion questions
Information about Indigenous culture that is RELEVANT for each poem (I’ve been very selective about what to include here due to the time constraints of school contact hours)
Writing tasks (with prompts)
This presentation helps take the class through FOUR of Jack Davis’ most famous poems:
The First Born
Dispossession
The Black Tracker
The Mining Company’s Hymn
***Stan Grant Resource:
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This lesson was designed to have students think critically about persuasive devices and how persuasive techniques can be used to help push the betterment of society.
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What you can expect from the resource:
11 Slides of resources - this took my lower to mixed ability year 10 class approximately 2 hours to complete.
Step by step guidance on literary anaysis
An exit card activity
A homework task.
Redfern Now! Resource:
This is a film study, designed to have students academically engage with the contents of Australian media. Why is representation important? How have Australians been represented in the past? What changes do we see?
What to expect:
Discussion points about Indigenous poeple and media.
Research task about the social influence of the Australian National Anthem
Prior knowledge questions
External references used to guide thinking.
Close film analysis of Redfern Now
Study 3 has a focus on Aboriginal people impacted by European settlement. It introduces the sustainable lifestyle of Tangani Aboriginal people. Through map, photograph, written text students can gain some understanding of European impacts. Questions are set to allow students to debate issues and asses changes. The final pages lists possibilities for further Coorong studies. Fits ACHGE006 ACHGE022 ACHGE021 ACHGE027.
One powerpoint presentation and 2 handout sheets to help students create artwork based on the theme of aboriginal art.
The presentation involves lesson objectives, high order thinking questions and criteria for success.
The activities focus upon aboriginal symbols and creating journey maps and stories.
The presentation was originally created to be used with KS3 but it can be easily adapted for other year groups.
This word search uses key terms and phrases from the topic Aboriginal Rights and Freedoms. It is designed to be part of the NSW History K-10 Syllabus for the Australian Curriculum.
Stage 5
Depth study 4: Rights and Freedoms
A range of notes, tutorials, learning activities and worksheets relating to the traditional Aboriginal lifestyles in Australia and British colonisation.
This worksheet supports the History Australian National Curriculum Syllabus
Stage 4
Depth Study 6: Expanding Contacts
(d) Aboriginal and Indigenous Peoples, Colonisation and Contact History.
It guides students in describing and assessing the importance of land use and ownership by Aboriginal people and Europeans in the 1800s and investigates whether conflicting views were just about ethnic traditions or about these many other factors.
This Aboriginal story (language group unknown) is a creation story about turtles.
It is in PowerPoint format.
Use this story to provide an Aboriginal perspective in literacy. The title slide references the source of the story. The final slide provides a link to an animated version of the story of Wayamba (Wayambeh). Compare representations of the story. Ask students to make their own representation.
Aboriginal Noongar Vocabulary lesson - PowerPoint lesson that covers many Aboriginal Noongar words. 258 slides. A great lesson to go through regularly and alongside your existing curriculum content. Such an easy way to incorporate Aboriginal culture into your class programs.
Aboriginal Noongar Vocabulary lesson includes:
Who the Noongar people are
foods
animals
places/environment
plants and trees
conversation words
colours
numbers
feelings
body parts
verbs
time words
seasons
weather words
menu page as an easy way to navigate through the large lesson and only cover content you wish to cover
home page on each slide to easily return to the menu page
engaging clipart
learning intentions
success criteria
check for understanding (brief)
phonic differences (some phonic differences between Noongar and Standard Australian English words explained)
257 slides (includes cover pages)
A great lesson to integrate alongside your existing curriculum content
some pronunciations are included (where known)
Enjoy!
Please note: there may be some differences with how the colours grey and white are said
Please note: I regularly revise and update products. Once you purchase, please go pack to your purchase page and redownload so that you get the revised versions.
There are 8 slides in this powerpoint. The students are encouraged to look closely at a variety of images and make observations about the ancient drawings from the Kimberley region of Australia.