Wednesday 29 August 2018

Expanding Our Horizons: Year 9 LIFE Week Melbourne Canberra Tour 2018

As part of the LIFE Week City Experience, a group of 23 Year 9 students, accompanied by three staff set off to explore the cities of Melbourne and Canberra, before heading to the Snowy Mountains to experience skiing or snowboarding.

The city itineraries provided for students to investigate their Big Ideas Winter Term question: Does the City C Us? As part of the project, students are working in teams to interrogate how well cities engage young people and to offer solutions for improving the engagement of young people through the lenses of the ‘Six C’s’ – Character, Communication, Citizenship, Critical and Creative Thinking and Collaboration.

The tour group first headed to Melbourne where students were able to explore a wide range of ways that the city of Melbourne appeals to young people. The students took a walking tour of the CBD, including looking at the ways in which dark alleyways have been transformed as works of street art or been turned into cultural experiences. Students visited the Australian Centre for the Moving Image where they considered different uses of technology to engage young people in all things film and sound. They explored the diversity of the Queen Victoria Markets and experienced a football game at the iconic MCG. Students learnt about the legend of Ned Kelly and how the city of Melbourne preserves the legacy of the Ned Kelly story through the Old Melbourne Gaol and the State Library. Students had some shopping time in the city and experienced Melbourne’s tram network.





The tour then flew to Canberra for three days of exploring the nation’s Capital. The visit to Canberra served as both another city to explore for their Big Ideas project as well as a culmination and enrichment of student’s learning in Civics and Citizenship, History, Geography and Science. Students visited a wide range of Civics and educational attractions including Federal Parliament House and the Museum of Australian Democracy at Old Parliament House, the Australian War Memorial, the National Library, The National Film and Sound Archive, the National Portrait Gallery, the CSIRO and Questacon. Along the way, students considered how Canberra city engages young people with Australia’s national icons and parliamentary process.

In the last phase of the tour, students and staff headed for the snowfields at Smiggin Holes in the Snowy Mountains. Students spent two days developing their skills in either skiing or snowboarding. The tour was a great success and a week of living life to the full.

The Australian Government recognises the importance of all young Australians being able to visit the national capital as part of their Civics and Citizenship education. To assist families in meeting the cost of the excursion, the Australian Government has contributed funding of $240.00 per student under the Parliament and Civics Education Rebate program towards those costs. The rebate is paid directly to the school upon completion of the excursion.

Ms Karen Taylor
Year 9 Learning Innovator

29 August 2018

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