Two-way science at Areyonga: investigating the health of local springs
Introduction
Areyonga School is a Northern Territory government school located in a remote community 225 km west of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory on the traditional lands of the Pitjantjatjara people. It has an enrolment of 50 students, of whom 100% are Aboriginal.
The school is participating in CSIRO's Science Pathways for Indigenous Communities Indigenous STEM Education Project, through the Tangentyere Council and funded by the BHP foundation. Students learn science that links Aboriginal ecological knowledge through on-Country and classroom projects to the Australian Curriculum: Science. This approach to teaching is referred to as Two-way Science and provides a context for delivering the Australian Curriculum: Science.
In this illustration, Years 3-6 students learn about local springs using the two-way approach. Students learn about making predictions prior to an investigation – predicting whether the water in the springs is as healthy, healthier or less healthy than when they carried out their investigation in the previous year. They learn:
- about the tools and methods used to monitor waterholes, both traditional and scientific
- to identify and record details about the small water animals they find
- how to transfer the data from these findings to a pollution indicator chart to assess water health
- how to compare and discuss the differences between the data collected on this trip and that from the previous year.
As a group, they develop an answer to their science investigation.
At Areyonga, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Histories and Cultures CCP is integral to everything they do. For the purposes of the teaching and learning that takes place in this illustration, the following Organising Ideas are the main focus:
OI.2: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities maintain a special connection with and responsibility for Country/Place
OI.3: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples have holistic belief systems and are spiritually and intellectually connected to the land, sea, sky and waterways
OI.5: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island Peoples’ ways of life are uniquely expressed through ways of being, knowing, thinking and doing.
- How are teachers developing in Aboriginal students a love of science and of culture?
- This illustration of practice demonstrates learning with Aboriginal students. In what ways could non-Indigenous students benefit from this type of learning?
- How have the educators supported the development of science inquiry skills in students?
- Worksheets and lesson plans
- CSIRO Science Pathways for Indigenous Communities: https://www.csiro.au/en/Education/Programs/Indigenous-STEM/Science-Pathways
- CSIRO Indigenous STEM Education Project: https://www.csiro.au/en/Education/Programs/Indigenous-STEM. (Science Pathways for Indigenous Communities is part of the broader CSIRO Indigenous STEM Education Project delivered by CSIRO and funded by the BHP Foundation.)