War Correspondents: Choose your own learning adventure
A resource for Year 9 teachers and students
Ben Lawless, Aitken College, Victoria
War Correspondents is a ‘learning adventure’ where students learn about some of the characteristics of Australia prior to the First World War, Australia’s involvement in the war and some of the lasting consequences, while developing their history skills. It is designed to fit in with the Year 9 History Curriculum — see Curriculum links for details.
1. What is a learning adventure?
A learning adventure is a unique way of learning about a topic, where students learn through a first person narrative and choose their own path through the adventure.
This learning adventure package and approach switches the learning from teacher-led to student-led.
This learning adventure focuses on 14 defining moments in Australian history.
Content knowledge
Students learn at their own pace by reading the adventure.
They also do regular content test quizzes (four in total).
Historical skills
The learning adventure contains the teaching of each skill, worked examples and exercises.
The teacher then checks if they have done it correctly and if not, they guide students back to the material so that they can revise their responses.
Students can complete the learning adventure activities independently online.
The activities have been designed to be easily printed or loaded to the class digital learning platform and interactive whiteboard by teachers. If the online option is chosen, students can save their work regularly to a suitable digital platform decided by the school/teacher.
The activities can be completed in one go, or they can be staggered and completed over a period of time.
Each time students finish an activity ‘assignment’ or end-of-section quiz they can save and email or print and show their teacher, reviewing their progress with their Learning Checklist spreadsheet.
The teacher decides if the activity has been completed successfully — if so, this gets recorded on the Learning Checklist spreadsheet which tracks XP (experience points) and what level they have reached.
If the activity hasn’t been done correctly, the teacher can guide students back to the material so that students can revise their responses.
It is important that students ‘own’ the Learning Checklist so that interests and strengths are recognised, and areas for development encouraged and supported.
Benefits
The learning adventure focuses on in-depth learning through:
historically accurate and authentic narratives
choice of a path through the narrative
targeted development of history skills at each stage
ongoing review, reflection and evaluation processes and data tracking
The learning adventure can be presented flexibly at each stage, and as independent or collaborative learning (a mixture of approaches is recommended to maximise engagement and depth).
The learning adventure is student-centred and teacher facilitated.
The learning adventure promotes:
engagement and motivation through competition (students can potentially see other students’ scores)
differentiation/targeted teaching (use of Learning Checklist and constant feedback processes)
interpretation of questions
better retention of content knowledge (because it is taught as a first-person narrative and students find it easier to remember narratives).
Game elements promote engagement, motivation and allow for easier constructive feedback because:
students are used to making choices where there is a clear contextual situation, problem-solving, learn-as-you-progress and score-checks
many students are fluent and comfortable with gaming and digital mediums that offer positive and constructive feedback on how to improve their performance.
2. How to run the learning adventure
Ensure students are ready to make some adventurous decisions, then simply get them to work their way through the learning adventure.
They will have choices along the way, but the adventure has been designed so that they will all learn the same historical skills and core First World War content knowledge no matter what choices they make.
Each time a student completes an activity, they can save and email or print and show the teacher with their updated Learning Checklist:
If it has been done correctly, put a ‘1’ in the appropriate cell in the scoring spreadsheet.
If it has been done incorrectly, guide students back to the material so that they can revise their responses.
There are 26 unique sections in the learning adventure. There are 37 in total because some are repeated to allow for the different choices students can make. In reality students will only see each piece of content once.
The learning adventure is designed to be completed over a number of lessons or sessions. At the end of each session students will need to record the activity number that they were working on. They can then use the Activity index page to find their way back in the next lesson.
Using the score sheet in the Learning Checklist
If you want to add a little friendly competition into the learning adventure (which can be very motivating for students), use the score sheet in the Learning Checklist spreadsheet and project the results on a projector as you play.
Type or paste in student names or student IDs.
Every time a student completes an activity, look at which section it is from. Put a ‘1’ in that cell in the spreadsheet.
It will then automatically give the student XP (experience points) and convert it into a level.
Scores:
XP
Level
0
1
100
2
200
3
400
4
800
5
1000
6
1500
7
2500
8
4500
9
7500
10
Rubric used
Content knowledge
Terms and concepts
Questioning
Source analysis
Perspectives
C1: Remembers knowledge
T1: Uses keywords
Q1: Asks historical question
S1: Lists specific features of source
P1: Recognises a perspective
C2: Summarises knowledge
T2: Explains keywords
Q2: Asks open historical question
S2: Identifies patterns or themes in source
P2: Summarises a perspective
C3: Explains knowledge
T3: Uses concepts
Q3: Asks specific, open historical question
S3: Uses outside knowledge to help explain source
P3: Explains what a historical perspective means
C4: Categorises knowledge
T4: Explains concepts
Q4: Recognises questions that help answer overall question
S4: Uses source to help explain external events / developments
P4: Compares two historical perspectives
If a student completes the learning adventure, they will have completed activities for all of these levels.
The National Museum of Australia would love to hear or see how you have used this learning adventure with your class, or how it has inspired you to use the decision-maker learning approach, or the Museum’s Defining Moments and other resources from Australia’s Defining Moments Digital Classroom. Teachers can contact us via the National Museum of Australia’s Contact us page.
4. Australian Curriculum level and focus
Historical knowledge and understanding
Students will cover the following areas:
An overview of the causes of World War I and the reasons why men enlisted to fight in the war (ACDSEH021)
The places where Australians fought and the nature of warfare during World War I, including the Gallipoli campaign (ACDSEH095)
The impact of World War I (ACDSEH096)
Identifying the groups who opposed conscription
Studying the first and second referenda on conscription
The commemoration of World War I, including debates about the nature and significance of the Anzac legend (ACDSEH097)
Historical skills
Students will exercise the following historical skills:
Chronology, terms and concepts
Use chronological sequencing to demonstrate the relationship between events and developments in different periods and places (ACHHS182)
Use historical terms and concepts (ACHHS183)
Historical questions and research
Identify and select different kinds of questions about the past to inform historical inquiry (ACHHS184)
Evaluate and enhance these questions (ACHHS185)
Identify and locate relevant sources, using ICT and other methods (ACHHS186)
Analysis and use of sources
Identify the origin, purpose and context of primary and secondary sources (ACHHS187)
Process and synthesise information from a range of sources for use as evidence in an historical argument (ACHHS188)
Evaluate the reliability and usefulness of primary and secondary sources (ACHHS189)
Perspectives and interpretations
Identify and analyse the perspectives of people from the past (ACHHS190)
Identify and analyse different historical interpretations (including their own) (ACHHS191)
Explanation and communication
Develop texts, particularly descriptions and discussions that use evidence from a range of sources that are referenced (ACHHS192)
Select and use a range of communication forms (oral, graphic, written) and digital technologies (ACHHS193)
Interdisciplinary thinking
Students will engage with the concepts of:
significance
continuity and change
cause and effect
place and space
interconnections
roles, rights and responsibilities
perspectives and action.
Cross-curriculum priorities
Students will have been involved in additional learning about aspects of:
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander societies
Asia and the Pacific
sustainability.
Source: The Australian Curriculum Humanities and Social Sciences, v8.3, December 2016, viewed 1 November 2018
5. Learning at the National Museum of Australia
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