

Competition
closed Friday 29th June 2001
WEBQUEST
Two major prizes of digital
cameras for the best answers to the Webquest
Webquest runner-up prizes of 8 wireless keyboards and mice (kindly donated
by Protech Australasia)
Competition
closed Friday 29th June 2001
MAXMAZE
Over 100 copies of 'South
Australia - H orizons Beyond' a beautiful pictorial history of SA in hard
cover (kindly donated by Information SA). Minor prizes including books, Tshirts,
CDs for each Maxmaze
Quiz.
Competition
closed Friday 29th June 2001
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Teachers
Area
Activity
Centre | Lesson Plans | Webquest
| Students Home
Lesson
Plans
Primary: Webquest
| Invention | Then
as now | The Rations
Middle: Webquest | Where
is here | Then as now | The
Rations
Webquest
Primary
TEACHER NOTES
BAND: Primary Years
LEARNING AREA(S):
Society and Environment
TOPIC / CONCEPT:
Telecommunications Webquest
http://www.connectingthecontinent.com/
ctcwebsite/ctkids/ctkids.htm
This webquest has been developed as part of Connecting the Continent, which is an exciting major online event
between 18th June - 1 July 2001 for Centenary of Federation SA.
Students develop an understanding
of the role telecommunications play in everyday life and manipulate
different roles/characters in the actual time when the telegraph
line from Pt Augusta to Darwin began planning and construction.
To use a webquest effectively,
teachers need to:
- contextualize the problematic
situation presented in the webquest
- engage in the process
as co-investigator
- model and coach effective
group work
- assess learning throughout
the process and in a variety of ways including student self-assessment
TIMELINE: 5 weeks
(3 x 45 mins lessons per week)
Further details and assessment
can be found at the URL http://www.oac.schools.sa.edu.au/webquest/
SACSA information
STUDENT TASK:
The Connecting the Continent webquest will transform you
into a different role/character in the actual time when the telegraph
line from Pt Augusta to Darwin began during the 1870s. You will
need to conduct research into the Overland Telegraph Line and
Federation to help you develop your chosen role and background
knowledge before solving problems of the time.

Who are you? .... What
do you do?... Consider some of the options below or negotiate
another with your teacher.
- A new settler - station
owner
- Indigenous perspective
or viewpoint
- Charles Todd
- male perspective
- female perspective
- a Journalist reporting
on the project
- a worker on the team
who planned and built the Overland Telegraph Line
- Alice Todd at home
with the children in Adelaide
- free-choice option
to be negotiated
Research such topics
as:
- Who are you?
- What do you do?
- How wealthy are you?
- Who are your friends
and family - are they in Australia?
- Where do you live?
- What transport do you
use?
- What involvement and
contributions did you have with Connecting the Continent?
- What yarns or stories
have you to tell?
- What impact did the
Overland Telegraph Line have on the quality of your character?
- What employment opportunities
did the Overland Telegraph Line give to women especially? In
the 1870 census of a total population of 99,328 there were 46,475
females.
- Consider social, environmental,
financial, health, transport, communication, work, flora and
government issues of the times.
- Compare a typical day
in the life of your character in the past (1870's), present
and in the future.
You will need to conduct
research into the Overland Telegraph and Federation to help you
develop your chosen role of the 1870's to solve problems. Small
groups will be formed to develop future predictions and solve
problems.
Some of these problems
include:
- As there was no refrigeration
in the 1870's suggest ways that the workers could have preserved
food while they worked along the track. Remember that this construction
took two years. What would the group advise the leaders of the
Overland team. These men are doing very heavy manual work through
very hard conditions.
- During the summer rain,
the telegraph line just north of Strangways Springs was washed
out. The construction team is currently near Barrow Creek. What
strategies do you suggest they follow now? Remember the telegraph
line has not been completed - so messages back to Adelaide may
take sometime
You can create and present
a multimedia project on the computer using software such as PowerPoint,
Hyperstudio or publish a website to deliver your views to the
rest of the class and world.
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Remember you will
also be investigating the Question.
Your answer to this
question can be submitted to the organisers for prizes.
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Do you think Australia's telephone systems would have been
different today without federation? |
Created by Kate Dibben, Open
Access College, South Australia, Australia
email:
kdibben@oac.sa.edu.au
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