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Journeys - Related Learning Outcomes

While working on the Journeys theme students will have opportunities to demonstrate achievement in many of the Overarching and Learning Area outcomes as detailed in the Curriculum Framework.

These are set out in tabular form below.


Outcome Suggested Activities
1. Students use language to understand, develop and communicate ideas and information and interact with others. Oral discussion, debates, interviews, presentations.
Storytelling, journal writing, writing reviews, creative writing, essay writing.
3. Students recognise what information is needed, locate and obtain it from a range of sources and evaluate, use and share it with others. Students research authors, explorers, migration to Australia using nonfiction and fiction books, CD-ROMs, the Internet, email, videos. They find books by favourite authors, genres relevant to the Journeys theme and encourage others to read them.
4. Students select, use and adapt technologies. Wordprocessing and multimedia programs such as KidPix, Publisher or HyperStudio for publishing written work.
CD-ROMs for research, creating flow charts/explosion diagrams eg. Inspiration.
Email, the Internet, fax and phone for research, contacting others.
PowerPoint for oral presentations.
Digital cameras for recording information.
Videos/film for dramatic presentations.
6. Students visualise consequences, think laterally, recognise opportunity and potential and are prepared to test options. Students plan, organise, create timelines, ask questions and are prepared to renegotiate assigned tasks and justify their reasons.
They record, review and evaluate their progress and meet deadlines.
They conduct self and peer assessment according to negotiated criteria.
8. Students understand their cultural, geographic and historical contexts and have the knowledge, skills and values necessary for active participation in life in Australia. Students read, listen to & view a range of texts that reflect our literary & historical heritage. They identify, discuss, analyse, appreciate the social values reflected in these texts and study the ways in which texts can reflect, reinforce or challenge values and world views.
10. Students participate in creative activity of their own and understand and engage with the artistic, cultural and intellectual work of others. Students write a poem, play or story; participate in role-play, readers theatre or a dramatic performance; produce a painting, collage or mural based on the odyssey theme. They offer constructive comments about the creative endeavours of their peers.
12. Students are self-motivated and confident in their approach to learning and are able to work individually and collaboratively. Students actively participate in group work, discussions and take responsibility for completing their task.
They ask questions, listen actively, share information and work cooperatively.
13. Students recognise that everyone has the right to feel valued and safe, and, in this regard, understand their rights and obligations and behave responsibly. Students work cooperatively, share information and resources and assist others.

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