NOTE: This unit of work is based on Welcome to Country: Youth Edition, published in 2019 by Hardie Grant Explore. As of 2023, this has been superseded by The Welcome to Country Handbook. Although we have updated our website with the details of the new edition, the content and page references in this resource continue to reflect the original text.

Introductory activities

Welcome to Country: Youth Edition is a general guidebook to support cultural competence and the understanding of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander histories and cultures. It is highly recommended as a professional learning resource for any educator in any learning area or year group. It is also a valuable text to support student understanding across the curriculum; it would be especially pertinent to HASS, Science and the Arts as well as English. See the comprehensive teachers’ notes on the Hardie Grant Publishing website.

This resource provides suggestions for linking Marcia Langton’s Welcome to Country: Youth Edition to a study of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander poetry in an English unit. This could be easily adapted to English units in other year levels and paired with any novels or films dealing with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander histories and cultures.

Pre-European life in Australia

The first chapter of this book, ‘Prehistory’, summarises some of the archaeological, historical, scientific and cultural evidence of Aboriginal occupation of the Australian continent for 65,000 years or more. It discusses:

  • key rock art sites
  • Lake Mungo evidence of human burials dated 35,000 years ago
  • historical records pieced together in Bill Gammage’s The Biggest Estate on Earth: How Aborigines Made Australia
  • the seminal text on Aboriginal agriculture and complex societies, Bruce Pascoe’s Dark Emu
  • stories and art as records of the past, including a map that shows 21 sites where stories passed down for 7,000 years refer to sea levels rising and inundating Australia after the last Ice Age
  • the clues that shell middens give us about Aboriginal life
Timeline activity

Students will have learned about the ‘Out of Africa’ theory for the movement of peoples across the globe in Year 7 History. They will also have learned about Ancient Greece/Rome/Egypt in Year 7 History (and in popular culture). Challenge students to think more deeply about Ancient Australian history and where it sits in relation to this previous learning.

Have students contribute to a visual timeline around your classroom, corridor or school grounds to contextualise prehistory, ancient history, and post-colonial history. The following resources may be useful:

When did modern humans get to Australia?’ by Fran Dorey (Australian Museum) This resource contests the ‘Out of Africa’ theory and presents new evidence of human movement, as well as setting out some key evidence of ancient Australian inhabitants.
Prehistoric period (until 1050 AD) (National Museum of Denmark) This resource outlines Denmark’s prehistory, from the Mesolithic period to the Viking Age, from the Scandinavian perspective.
Timeline: the evolution of ancient empires’ by Peter Jones (History Extra) This resource, originally written for BBC History, presents significant moments in the timeline of the world’s ‘first great civilisations’, highlighting key events in Ancient Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Chinese and Mayan societies.
Australian colonisation and the post-colonial eras of protection, assimilation, self-determination and reconciliation Explained simply in the history section of ‘Working With Indigenous Australians’ (Muswellbrook Shire Council), and in more detail on the BlackWords Historical Events Calendar (AustLit).

Select the appropriate resource for your class, allocate sections to groups of students, and have them summarise and present information on cards (with images) for the class timeline.

For another visual, see the timeline at the bottom of the Discover Murray River ‘Aboriginal communities’ page, which plots time from the original Lake Mungo inhabitants to the Murray River people today.

Frontier conflict

Documenting First Nations’ experiences of colonisation may lead to a discussion of the frontier conflict and massacres of the 19th century. Covering this sensitive and confronting content is an essential part of ‘truth-telling’ and presenting a true version of history. It is important to liaise with the local Aboriginal community and families regarding the best approaches to this topic, as well as any sensitivities. The SBS Learn teacher notes for Occupation: Native provide some useful tips for setting up challenging topics in the classroom. It is also important to carefully debrief with all students to support their reactions and responses to the information. A useful reflection exercise would be to draw students’ attention to healing, focusing on uplifting and inspiring stories and quotes from First Nations people. The final chapter of Welcome to Country: Youth Edition (‘Looking to the future for Indigenous Australia’) may provide some ideas.

If appropriate for your class and context, and with some careful introduction, students can look at the Colonial Frontier Massacres Map available from the University of Newcastle. They can read about how these massacres were represented historically, and how they were hidden or denied by the government and colonising communities. This research provides rich opportunities to discuss how an ‘Australian’ history and identity is managed and portrayed, and to consider who is silenced in the process (see the related article from The Guardian). Students could identify events on the map that occurred close to their school and add these to the class timeline. Further context and information can be found in the Australian Museum’s Unsettled exhibition, led by First Nations academics and curators, and in the accompanying learning journey.

Culminating discussion

Once the class timeline has been established, draw out some key discussion points with students:

  1. Did you notice how much longer Indigenous Australian societies have existed compared to the Ancient Greek/Roman/Egyptian societies you learned about in Year 7, or the Vikings we mythologise and idolise in popular culture?
  2. How impactful is it to visualise the length of Aboriginal occupation of this continent, compared to the length of European occupation?
  3. Considering all the atrocities that have been committed against the Indigenous peoples and the environment of this continent – as well as the length of time it has taken for these atrocities to amass and have a serious impact – what observations can you make? See this Guardian article for useful facts about the destruction of the landscape since colonisation.
  4. What is interesting about Peter Jones’ timeline of ancient empires? Why are these the civilisations promoted and discussed in popular media, on school syllabuses, etc.? Read the timeline’s subheading and respond to it by asking: whose perspective is this? Whose perspective are we missing?
  5. How important is it to educate people about Ancient Australia and the post-colonial eras of protection, assimilation, self-determination and reconciliation? What difference will it make if we equip future generations with this knowledge and understanding?

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Resources to support an alternative view of pre-colonial Indigenous societies and continuing land management practices
  • Reading Australia’s teaching resource for Dark Emu (book by Bruce Pascoe, resource by John Thomas and Ben Wilson) interrogates the ‘mainstream’ view of Australian history, discussing how point of view and selective representation influence the ways in which histories are presented and understood. This unit supports students to investigate theories of ‘civilisation’ and Aboriginal law, and to develop informed opinions about the pervading ‘deficit view’ that Indigenous Australians were not productive users/owners of the land (i.e. terra nullius: the view that ‘justified’ colonisation). You can read an excerpt from Dark Emu here.
  • The website for Mungo National Park includes videos from Aboriginal elders, scientific and archaeological explanations and images, and geographical information about the area.
  • Through Our Eyes is a documentary project about Elders and knowledge-holders caring for Country in north-western NSW. Series 1 and Series 2 are available on YouTube.
  • Resources about connection to Country – specifically, Aboriginal connections to water – are available here.
  • ABC Education has produced some short videos about caring for Country:
  • You can read about shell middens from the following regions:

Personal response on reading the text

You can introduce the following general discussion points after a first reading of Welcome to Country: Youth Edition. Fuller engagement with the text, in conjunction with analysis of First Nations poetry, is covered in the Close Study section.

  1. What was your reaction to reading about frontier violence in Chapter 2 (‘Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures and post-colonial history’)? Have you come across the term ‘frontier wars’ before? How do you think Australian society, and schools, should deal with this side of our history?
  2. Had you known about or considered the perspectives of First Nations LGBTQIA+ communities before reading Chapter 2? What interested you in this section?
  3. It is not often recognised that First Nations communities are incredibly resilient. What have you learned about the continuing cultural and spiritual connections that First Nations peoples maintain with Country, ancestors and traditional knowledges?
  4. What do you understand about the connection between language and culture? Does this enhance your perspective on protection and assimilation policies, which banned the use of Indigenous languages? See the missions, stations and reserves page on the AIATSIS website.
  5. What does kinship law mean, and what are its benefits? How do you think Aboriginal societies would have been impacted by colonial government practices that contradicted and ignored this law?
  6. What are some key examples of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ knowledge of the land and the environment (e.g. fire use, astronomy)?
  7. What are some of the ways in which art and performance (e.g. dance, song, film) can preserve culture, challenge stereotypes, fight against colonial viewpoints and assert a modern, empowered First Nations identity and culture?
  8. Reflect on the Stolen Generations and the political imperative behind them – what are the contradictions in the narratives around ‘protection’ and ‘assimilation’?
  9. In what ways have self-determination and activism around citizenship and land rights improved conditions for First Nations communities?
  10. How can you, as a citizen, contribute positively to reconciliation and change for the better?

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Synthesising task

An oral presentation

This is both a culminating task for the Initial Response section and a preparatory task for the analysis of First Nations poetry. It does not require sophisticated literary analysis, but rather acts as a ‘way in’ to considering how First Nations artists express themes of survival and hope for the future.

On p. 116 of her teachers’ notes, Melinda Sawers identifies survival and reconciliation as the main ideas in Welcome to Country: Youth Edition. Students are to select 2–3 examples where these ideas are evident in the text, and link them to a song by a First Nations artist that they feel exemplifies the themes of survival and/or reconciliation. They will need to justify their choices and highlight key quotes from the song that they feel are particularly powerful and effective.

Suggested songs for this task include:

Students should present their responses with an accompanying Prezi, PowerPoint or Captivate project, sharing the lyrics and playing part of the song where possible.

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