The Story of Australia
The First Fleet
History Project

 

The First Fleet History Project is a teaching aid and student project resource for studying the history of the first fleet to Australia. It is an interactive computer based program suitable for use in the middle/upper primary and lower secondary school.

The program was inspired by, and produced according to, the information set out in The National Centre for History Education -Teachers’ Guide.

The First Fleet is centred on a fifteen minute audio-visual documentary, which combines drawings, narration, music and sound effects to tell the story of The First Fleet to Australia.

The program is also a comprehensive student project resource that challenges learners to create their own version of The First Fleet movie by replacing all, or any, of the drawings in the original movie with images that they have either drawn or painted themselves, or those that they have searched for and chosen as replacements, which depict their interpretation of The First Fleet to Australia.

The topics covered in The First Fleet movie are…

 

The Agrarian Revolution of the eighteenth century Briton and the migration of the agricultural workers, who were forced off the land, into the cities of England.


The poverty and deplorable living conditions that existed in the overcrowded cities and the rash of petty crime that broke out, which caused more and more severe laws to be passed by the British government.

 

 

The processions of the poor that passed through the English law courts who were crammed into the prisons or herded into ships known as hulks moored in rivers and ports.
The American Declaration of Independence in 1776 and their refusal to pay British taxes or accept British convicts.

How the British authorities need of a dumping place for their convicts, and their hopes of making some profits as well, lead to their decision to establish a settlement in New Holland.
The appointment of Captain Arthur Phillip to be Governor of the new colony and the organisation and preparation of the first fleet.
The voyage to New South Wales and Phillip’s decision to move the settlement from Botany Bay to Port Jackson.


The First Fleet audio-visual movie gives a broad overview of the first fleet to Australia and places the significant events in the history of the first fleet in chronological order. The documentary is an excellent introduction to any studies of Australian history, and the Student Project section of the program provides a springboard to more in-depth studies and further inquiry into the first fleet to Australia.

Student Project

The NCHE Teachers Guide states that a survey of the research literature on narrative-based approaches to teaching documents a growing interest in the use of 'story' as a key strategy for developing young people's historical thinking. The research indicates that learners grapple with the past in much the same way as historians, making sense of it by analysing, ordering and linking events in storied form. With this research in mind, The First Fleet was designed as a project resource that challenges students to 'do' and 'make' history in a manner that resembles the historian's craft.

The program encourages students to create their own version of The First Fleet by replacing all, or any, of the 88 drawings in the original movie with images of their choosing. Replacing the drawings is a very easy process that requires students to simply prepare any images that they wish to import in jpeg format and then load them into the images folder that is provided in the program.
The names of the images will appear in the Image List in the import menu of the program and, when an image is selected a thumbnail of the image appears in the viewer window and when the import button is clicked, the program will import the image and automatically resize it to fit.

The First Fleet can be used by individual students, by students working together in groups, or by the entire class working on one project, i.e. with each student being allocated a section of the movie to find images for. The process of producing the movie fosters debate among the participating students and enables them to exchange ideas, refine points of view, make and justify choices, and appreciate the ideas of others.

The process of selecting and inserting the images into the program introduces learners to the use of historical methods and procedures, focusing on interpretation and the use of narrative to construct accounts of the past, involving them as participants rather than spectators in the study of Australian history.
Students can obtain the images from a number of sources, such as the project resources of the school library and the internet, or they can create their own drawings or paintings and insert them into the movie, depicting their personal interpretation of the first fleet to Australia
The search for and selection of the images helps in developing student’s research skills and helps them learn how to reason historically with content and to understand that historical accounts and illustrations of the past may differ or conflict because people select and use evidence in different ways for different purposes.

Being in the role of movie-maker particularly strengthens their understanding of how movies can select, exclude, control, manipulate and tamper with historical realities.

Each image of the movie has an accompanying “NOTES” page, which assists learners to develop patterns of historical reasoning by encouraging them to ask questions, foster debate, use evidence to support a position and, understanding that historical and literary dimensions of students' learning are complementary, to communicating that position effectively.

The Notes page encourages students to analyse and make judgments regarding the plausibility of the script for that section of the movie and to analyse and make judgments regarding how well the images depict what is stated in the script and to give the reasons for their assessments in writing.

The program also contains an assessment page where teachers can communicate with the students during their production of the movie and provide an assessment of their work on completion of the project.

The production of the movie gives students a feeling of accomplishment and builds a sense of pride in their achievement and, with the school’s purchase of an unlimited site licence, students can copy the program to their personal computer and work on it from there. Then, on completion of the program, students can burn a copy to CD-ROM for a permanent record of their achievement. Because the program remains active, students can consider it a work in progress and continue to update it if new and more suitable images come to hand.

The First Fleet has a comprehensive teachers' guide, program tutorials, student review sheets, further learning activities and an interactive review to reinforce student comprehension.

For further information contact...
Adkins Productions PO Box 114 Bullsbrook, WA 6084 Phone & Fax: 08 9571 1802
(ABN: 80 221 270 384) Email: adpro44@bigpond.com www.admarkeducation.com

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