Two Feet excursions aim to assist teachers in the delivery of the curriculum outcomes required in Western Australia.
Students are given the opportunity to develop the concepts of place, space, environment, interconnection and sustainability continue to be developed as a way of thinking. Students have the opportunity to inquire into how the environment supports the lives of people and all other living things; and that people have differing views on how sustainability can be achieved.
Students are given the opportunity to develop their historical understanding through the key concepts of sources, continuity and change, cause and effect, perspectives, empathy and significance. These concepts are investigated within the context of exploring the history of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples before the arrival of the Europeans, and European exploration and colonisation up to the early 1800s. They explore interactions between groups and determine how these experiences contributed to cultural diversity.
The Year 4 HASS curriculum has a general overview of the lives of indigenous people and the arrival of Europeans on the Australian continent. Within that context it is possible to examine the lives of the original inhabitants in the Perth region.
Perth city has been built over a series of lakes that were important an important source of food for the Whadjak Noongar people for over 40,000 years. Where were these lakes? How was the river used? What was the migration route used by these itinerant people as they followed the seasonal changes throughout the year? And what was the impact of the arrival of Europeans in 1829?