Vocabulary
Aboriginal Culture
Stolen Generations
Rabbit-Proof Fence
Big Ideas
100

This word describes a person who moves from place to place and never settles permanently in one location.

Nomad

100

Aboriginal people arrived in Australia over this many years ago.

60,000 years ago

100

This is the name given to the group of Aboriginal children who were forcibly removed from their families by the Australian government.

The Stolen Generations

100

Name the THREE girls who escaped from Moore River Native Settlement.

Molly, Daisy, and Gracie

100

True or False: Culture only includes the food and language of a group of people.

False — culture also includes traditions, values, beliefs, rituals, arts, and social behaviour.

200

This word means to adopt the customs of another culture, often at the cost of losing your own identity.

Assimilate

200

These traditional stories, passed down through generations, explain how the land, animals, and people were created.

Dreamtime stories

200

The Australian government removed Aboriginal children from their families in order to do this to them.

Assimilate them into white Australian society

200

This is the name of the settlement where the girls were taken after being removed from their home in Jigalong.

Moore River Native Settlement

200

Give ONE reason why it is important to have empathy when learning about migration and the Stolen Generations.

Open-ended. Award points for a relevant, thoughtful response (e.g. it helps us understand the suffering of others / it prevents us from judging people unfairly).

300

This phrase describes a country or city where many different cultures live together and blend into one community.

Melting pot

300

Aboriginal people passed their cultural knowledge down through these three things — not through writing.

Song, dance, and storytelling

300

This is the time period during which Aboriginal children were removed from their families.

Between the late 1800s and the 1970s

300

The girls used this landmark to guide them on their 1,600 km journey home.

The rabbit-proof fence

300

In the dialogue, one of them said Hong Kong is a "multicultural melting pot." What did that person mean by this?

That person meant that Hong Kong is a city where many different cultures coexist and blend together, creating a diverse society.

400

This word means "originating naturally in a particular region" — it describes the first peoples of a land before colonisation.

Indigenous

400

This type of lifestyle — moving between areas to allow the land to restore itself — helped Aboriginal people maintain a sustainable relationship with the environment.

Semi-nomadic lifestyle

400

Name TWO hardships that Aboriginal children faced after being removed from their families and placed in institutions.

Any two of — abuse / neglect / loneliness / not allowed to speak their language / not allowed to practise cultural traditions / never knowing their families

400

This is the name of the author of Follow the Rabbit-Proof Fence and her traditional Aboriginal name.

Doris Pilkington / Nugi Garimara

400

How are the experiences of Molly, Daisy, and Gracie an example of "forced migration"? Use the definition of the term in your answer.

Forced migration is the involuntary movement of people due to factors like conflict or persecution. The girls were forcibly removed from their homes by the authorities — they did not choose to leave — making their experience a form of forced migration.

500

This word describes the background information surrounding an event that helps us understand it fully. Without it, we cannot judge historical events fairly.

Context

500

Name THREE types of evidence that prove Aboriginal people have lived in Australia for tens of thousands of years.

Dreamtime stories / languages / rock paintings (engravings)

500

Explain in ONE sentence why the Stolen Generations was a tragedy. You must use at least TWO vocabulary words from the unit.

Open-ended. Award points for accurate use of vocabulary (e.g. forced migration, identity, assimilate, authoritarian, removed) and a clear, relevant explanation.

500

Why is Follow the Rabbit-Proof Fence described as an "authentic" and "perilous" story? Use both words in your answer.

It is authentic because it is based on the real experiences of Doris Pilkington's mother, Molly. It is perilous because the girls faced extreme danger walking 1,600 km through the Australian outback to return home.

500

In your own words, explain how the theme of identity connects the story of the Stolen Generations, Aboriginal culture, and the concept of migration. You must use at least THREE vocabulary words.

Open-ended. Award full points for a response that: (1) connects identity to at least two of the three topics, (2) uses three or more vocabulary words accurately, and (3) shows genuine understanding and critical thinking.

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