Introduction

Note for the teacher: An Indigenous perspective when teaching this unit is important because as well as recounting Sorry Day, the book is explaining Indigenous Australian history, not the version written by the colonisers.

Connecting to prior knowledge of Indigenous Australia

Ask a student to perform an Acknowledgement of Country (if not a traditional land owner) or Welcome to Country (if a traditional land owner) to pay respects to traditional custodians of the land/s on which teaching is taking place.

Introduce the book by telling the group the book has won awards. Sorry Day won the 2018 Book of the Year from Speech Pathology Australia, and was shortlisted for and won the Eve Pownall Award at the 2019 CBCA Awards.

Book Cover Analysis

Show the cover of Sorry Day. Ask students to make predictions, such as fact or fiction, and what Sorry Day might be about. Students may draw connections to either National Sorry Day (23 May) or the National Apology (2008). If students don’t know about the National Apology (2008), review this 3-minute YouTube clip. Find a copy of the National Apology here. If the students don’t know, open a conversation keeping in mind these are predictions. Who might be sorry and what might they be sorry for?

Continue by examining the book’s cover and ask students to identify the main character and think about who she might be. The image of the young girl suggests she is looking on with amazement, curiosity or innocence. Discuss possible reasons.

Ask the students to identify any symbols and think about what they might mean to different groups of people. For example, the flag might represent safety and security, identity and culture to some groups of people. The cumbungi or bulrush (native flora) symbolises security and safety.

Coral Vass is the author and Dub Leffler is the illustrator. This book is very different to the books Coral usually writes. Ask the students to visit her website to see the covers of her other books. Discuss some points of similarity and difference. Visit Dub’s biography. Discuss the other authors he has worked with and the texts that they produced (e.g. Colin Thompson, Shaun Tan and Banksy are all highly emotive and often make comments about social realities). Now that you’ve discussed Coral’s and Dub’s biographies, return to the cover of Sorry Day and ask students to suggest reasons why they wrote/illustrated this text.
(ACELT1613)   (EN3-1A)

 

Exploring the text in context

Read the book to the students without interruption so students can build story grammar and understand the context.

Ask the students to make connections with the book through text-to-self, text-to-text and text-to-world connections. Students turn to their elbow buddy to discuss, then open up for a whole class discussion.

Students may have noticed that some pages are sepia and other pages are in colour. Re-read the sepia pages only. Discuss how this changes the reading experience. Repeat the exercise where students make connections to the book through text-to-self, text-to-text and text-to-world connections. Students turn to their elbow buddy to discuss, then open up for a whole class discussion.

For a short video on the Stolen Generation, view this clip.

Re-read the coloured pages only. Discuss how this changes the reading experience. Repeat the exercise where students make connections to the book through text-to-self, text-to-text and text-to-world connections. Students turn to their elbow buddy to discuss, then open up for a whole class discussion.

For a short video on Tiga Bayles’ (Brisbane-based Indigenous radio broadcaster) response to the National Apology, view this clip.
(ACELT1614)   (EN3-7C)   (ACELY1709)   (EN3-8D)

 

Rich assessment task

Understanding how contextual information is communicated in a visual timeline

In a whole class teacher-led discussion, ask students what they know about timelines. Where have they seen a timeline before? What is the purpose or function of a timeline?

In pairs, students use a search engine and type in ‘timelines Australian history’ and click on ‘image’ link. Students explore one timeline that interests them. They name the general elements that make up a timeline (e.g. axis, continuum of time, graphic representations, chronology of events, sequence, etc.).

Now invite pairs of students to join with another pair of students and share what they know about the timeline they’ve been exploring. Students identify which timeline is the most effective at communicating factual information to a reader/viewer.

Conclude with a whole class discussion about effective timelines.

Scan the triple-page spread that features a visual timeline, located towards the end of the book, and distribute A3-sized copies of the visual timeline to students so they can add sticky notes and annotations over the images.

The images featured on the triple-page spread represent a factual timeline. Specific events and people are represented, but not named. Ask students to name the specific events and people in the timeline (e.g. Redfern march for reconciliation, multicultural Australia, John Curtin who was the Prime Minister during the early 1940s).

Now ask students to talk about the structural features of the timeline (e.g. sequence from dark sepia to light sepia to some colour, repetition of photo from title page, faces move from despair to cautious optimism).

Distribute photocopies of the visuals on the triple-page spread. Ask students to cut out each visual and construct a ‘standard’ timeline that shows dates along the continuum of time (e.g. pre-invasion waterways, late 1800s missions, early 1940s when John Curtin was Prime Minister, 1972 when Gough Whitlam visited the tent embassy, 1998 first National Sorry Day (23 May) with green sea of hands, 2000 walk for reconciliation on Sydney Harbour Bridge, 2008 National Apology, modern day multicultural Australia with a police officer who is Turkish, Asian faces, Muslim faces, Maggie’s finger pointing in the air to show optimism, handshake between black and white, interwoven hands).

Conclude by asking, ‘What has happened since the apology?’

The question may not be immediately answered but after the sequence of activities, students will be able to consider the question and seek answers.
(ACELY1708)   (EN3-2A)   (ACELY1709)   (EN3-8D)   (ACELY1711)   (EN3-5B)   (ACELY1712)   (EN3-1A)   (ACELY1713)   (EN3-3A)