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First Nations Seasons

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​​​Image: Mapping Country by Glenn Barry

Through hands-on exploration, students will investigate the significance of seasonal changes as they relate to First Nations peoples' connection to Country (land, sea, waterways). They will learn how seasonal indicators linked to weather, plant, animal, and environmental abundance, inform traditional practices and support access to food and resources for survival. Students will examine how First Nations peoples use traditional ecological knowledge to sustainably manage natural resources, and they will compare First Nations seasonal calendars with other cultural calendars to appreciate diverse perspectives and methods of communication.

Key Concepts:

  • Environment: Understanding natural processes and their relationship to seasonal changes.
  • Country/Place: Recognising the deep connection First Nations peoples have with their land, sea, and waterways.
  • Sustainability: Learning about the use of natural resources, resources & sustainable practices informed by traditional ecological knowledge.
  • Traditional Knowledge: Exploring the significance of seasonal indicators in First Nations cultures.
  • ​​​Cultural Perspectives: Appreciating the diversity of seasonal calendars and cultural ways of knowing and communicating.

AC(v8) Curriculum Links

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AC(v9) Curriculum Links

Year 3

Biological Sciences

Compare characteristics of living and non-living things and examine the differences between the life cycles of plants and animals. (AC9S3U01)

Elaboration: Investigating how First Nations Australians understand and utilise the life cycles of certain species.

 

Physical Sciences

Identify sources of heat energy and examine how temperature changes when heat energy is transferred from one object to another (AC9S3U03)

Elaboration: Investigating how changes of state in materials used by First Nations Australians such as beeswax or resins are important for their use.

 

Earth and Physical Sciences

Compare the observable properties of soils, rocks & minerals and investigate why they are important Earth resources. (AC9S3U02)

Elaboration: Investigating First Nations Australians' knowledges of different rock and mineral types, and how they were used for stone blades, grindstones & pigments.

 

Use & Influence of Science

Consider how people use scientific explanations to meet a need or solve a problem. (AC9S3H02)

Elaboration: Recognising how First Nations Australians observe & describe developmental changes in plants & animals to make decisions about when to harvest certain resources.

 

Geography

The ways First Nations Australians in different parts of Australia are interconnected with Country/Place. (AC9HS3K04)

The representation of contemporary Australia as states and territories, and as the Countries/Places of First Nations Australians prior to colonisation. (AC9HS3K03)

Elaboration: Compare the boundaries of Aboriginal Countries & Torres Strait Islander Places with the surveyed boundaries between Australian states & territories, to gain an appreciation of the different ways Australia can be represented.

 

Design & Technologies

Examine design and technologies occupations and factors including sustainability that impact on the design of products, services and environments to meet community needs. (AC9TDE4K01)

Elaboration: Exploring how many First nations Australians were & continue to be recognised for their specialist skill sin designing and producing products made from local material s& providing related services, using sustainable practices to ensure future access to meet community needs, for example, traditional adhesives.

Describe how forces & the properties of materials affect function in a product or system.  (AC9TDE4K02)

Elaboration: Researching how First Nations Australians consider buoyant forces as they select materials for watercraft, for example making bark or dugout canoes.

Describe the ways of producing food & fibre. (AC9TDE4K03)

Elaboration: Researching food & fibre production techniques & technologies developed by First nations Australians such as burning, tilling, planting, transplanting, watering, irrigating, weeding, thinning, cropping, storing & trading food.

 

Health & Physical Education

Making Active Choices

Participate in physical activities in natural and outdoor settings to examine factors that can influence their own and others' participation. (AC9HP4M05)

Making Healthy & Safe Choices

Investigate and apply behaviours that contribute to their own and others' health, safety, relationships and wellbeing. (AC9HP4P10)

Elaborations: Discussing the importance of a sense of belonging & connection in promoting mental health & wellbeing.

Identifying ways they can change their behaviours to support the sustainability of the Earth's systems.

Interacting with Others

Describe how valuing diversity influences wellbeing and identify actions that promote inclusion in their communities. (AC9HP4P05)

Elaboration: Recognising the important role of cultural narratives in describing the diversity, sharing beliefs and practices of First Nations communities.

Select, use and refine personal and social skills to establish, manage and strengthen relationships. (AC9HP4P04)

Elaboration: Discussing how demonstrating respect and empathy for First Nations Australians can build positive relationships.



Cross Curriculum Priorities & General Capabilities

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Histories and Cultures 

First Nations communities of Australia maintain a deep connection to, and responsibility for, Country/Place and have holistic values and belief systems that are connected to the land, sea, sky and waterways. (A_TSICP1)

First Nations Australians' ways of life reflect unique ways of being, knowing, thinking and doing. (A_TSIC2)

The significant and ongoing contributions of First Nations Australians and their histories and cultures are acknowledged locally, nationally and globally. (A_TSIP3)

The First Peoples of Australia belong to the world's oldest continuous cultures. First Nations Australians demonstrate resilience in the maintenance, practice and revitalisation of culture and continue to celebrate and share the past, present and future manifestations of their cultures. (A_TSIC3)

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Last reviewed 21 November 2024
Last updated 21 November 2024