Creative Schools 2025

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Welcome to Creative Schools 2025! This is a space for the Creative Practitioners and FORM staff to communicate and share key information and updates.


2025 Participating Schools
We are delighted to confirm that the following schools have been selected for the 2025 Creative Schools program. There is a smaller number of schools in the program (13 in 2025 compared to 19 in 2024):
  • Belmont City College
  • Clarkson Primary School
  • Curtin Primary School
  • Joseph Banks Secondary College
  • Kalamunda Senior High School
  • Nannup Senior High School
  • Neerigan Brook Primary School
  • Piara Waters Senior High School
  • Rosalie Primary School
  • Rostrata Primary School
  • Subiaco Primary School
  • Somerly Primary School
  • Walliston Primary School

Program Overview

The Creative Schools program provides funding for each school to work with two Creative Practitioners, who will collaborate with two classroom teachers and their students over 16 weeks (Terms 2 & 3).

Each teacher and Creative Practitioner will co-design and co-deliver a creative learning project aligned with a curriculum area of the teacher’s choice (e.g., Mathematics, HASS, Science), using an engaging, student-led, and creative approach.


Key Program Details

🔹 Classroom delivery:

  • Term 2: 8 sessions (90 minutes each)
  • Term 3: 8 sessions (90 minutes each)
  • The final session will be allocated to planning the class presentation (no student activity).
  • A showcase event will be held in the last two weeks of Term 3 to highlight the Creative Schools learning journey (details to follow).

🔹 Structure of each 90-minute session:

  • 15-minute warm-up
  • 60-minute main activity (aligned with curriculum goals)
  • 15-minute reflection on learning

🔹 Session days/times:

  • To be determined in collaboration with the teacher and Creative Practitioner.

Welcome to Creative Schools 2025! This is a space for the Creative Practitioners and FORM staff to communicate and share key information and updates.


2025 Participating Schools
We are delighted to confirm that the following schools have been selected for the 2025 Creative Schools program. There is a smaller number of schools in the program (13 in 2025 compared to 19 in 2024):
  • Belmont City College
  • Clarkson Primary School
  • Curtin Primary School
  • Joseph Banks Secondary College
  • Kalamunda Senior High School
  • Nannup Senior High School
  • Neerigan Brook Primary School
  • Piara Waters Senior High School
  • Rosalie Primary School
  • Rostrata Primary School
  • Subiaco Primary School
  • Somerly Primary School
  • Walliston Primary School

Program Overview

The Creative Schools program provides funding for each school to work with two Creative Practitioners, who will collaborate with two classroom teachers and their students over 16 weeks (Terms 2 & 3).

Each teacher and Creative Practitioner will co-design and co-deliver a creative learning project aligned with a curriculum area of the teacher’s choice (e.g., Mathematics, HASS, Science), using an engaging, student-led, and creative approach.


Key Program Details

🔹 Classroom delivery:

  • Term 2: 8 sessions (90 minutes each)
  • Term 3: 8 sessions (90 minutes each)
  • The final session will be allocated to planning the class presentation (no student activity).
  • A showcase event will be held in the last two weeks of Term 3 to highlight the Creative Schools learning journey (details to follow).

🔹 Structure of each 90-minute session:

  • 15-minute warm-up
  • 60-minute main activity (aligned with curriculum goals)
  • 15-minute reflection on learning

🔹 Session days/times:

  • To be determined in collaboration with the teacher and Creative Practitioner.
Discussions: All (121) Open (121)
  • Session 12 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Jodie Davidson & Fiona Ball

    by Jodie Davidson, 2 months ago
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    Warm Up

    1. Close your eyes

    2. Find your partner however you can only whisper

    Main Activity

    1. You want the government to invest in your design for all first home buyers 

    2. Create a one page persuasive presentation and justify the features of your house.

    3. Sketch an architecturally accurate model of your design and annotate, explaining (annotating) each aspect

    • What will it do? How? Why? 

    • Why have you made these decisions?

    • How it will reach the targets? 

    • How will it help with cost of living and the impact of large scale farming and food production?

    • Why are you growing these at home rather than relying on farms? 

    • How does this impact biomes? (eg: Bird netting to prevent birds eating crops but not killing the birds? 

     Reflection with the students 

    Write on the board

    1. What did you find the most difficult today?

    2. What is something that you discovered?

     Planning with the Teacher

    Successes

    • Questions - consideration about impact on biomes, gutters to catch water, energy input and output for solar panels
    • Transferring of information - they are talking to each other across groups about their projects and choices
    • Asking questions

    Challenges

    • They will definitely need an extra week to finish

    • Limited knowledge of how their designs could benefit and/or protect biomes

    • Still surface level knowledge but they are learning more from each other


    Working with students

    ‘The amount of classes that I go into where students have their phones out yet in here, not one of them has. That says how engaged they are’ … Relief Teacher

  • Session 12 - Somerly Primary School Year 3 - Jodie Davidson & Katy Hough

    by Jodie Davidson, 2 months ago
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    Warm Up 

    CREATIVE HABITS - using a timer for each 

    1. Help each other to get into groups of x (equally divide based on number of students) - collaborative

    2. In your group, use your bodies collaboratively to create a desert animal that is not a lizard - inquisitive, imaginative

    3. Use your bodies to make another Australian animal but it can’t be the same as any other group - discipline, persistence, imaginative, inquisitive, collaborative

     Main Activity 

    1. Today you will get time to finish your desert creature. (Demonstrate each process again) 

    2. It needs to have 

    • a wire skeleton

    • Rounded alfoil body parts

    • Material skin

    1. What creative habit does your creature need to survive in the wild?

    2. Using string and fabric or coloured card, create a cape (or similar) for your creature to wear that tells us what its creative habit is.   


    FOR EARLY FINISHERS

    1. How many different animals can you cut out and glue to coloured card?

    2. How could you group these animals?


     Reflection with the students 

    If you could choose an animal that was collaborative, which one would it be and why?

    If you could choose an animal that was inquisitive, which one would it be and why?

    If you could choose an animal that was imaginative, which one would it be and why?

    If you could choose an animal that was persistent, which one would it be and why?

    If you could choose an animal that was disciplined, which one would it be and why?

    Planning with the Teacher

    Successes

    • Providing another session for students to continue their desert creatures gave students who hadn’t been here, time to create their own creature and also, those who had, the opportunity to reflect and improve on their previous effort. 

    • Isaac, who is new to this class and doesn’t always participate, did take part today. He created his own desert dog using wire and also answered a number of different questions presented to the class

    • Sharing ideas and techniques. Ava set up a ‘bow factory’ where she made assorted bows that students could then come to her shop to purchase. Some of the boys included leads for their lizards so they could take them for a walk while others could be heard explaining their ideas and giving positive feedback and comments on each other's creature.

    Challenges

    • Talking in groups and generally not being aware of what is going on around them, particularly when an adult is speaking or attempting to get their attention initially proved challenging. Rather than continue with all of the typical techniques, I opted to count down from 5, raise a hand and wait. I explained that it was their time to participate and it was up to them to decide how much creative time they wanted to have and how much talking and waiting time they wanted. It took a few times but definitely improved and when it came to the main activity and reflection, they were much more attentive and respectful to others and what they were saying.


    Working with students

    ‘I think the students have worked better on the program this term with their experiences last term. I also think that when my new student is in, it is a good way for him to be included in the classroom in a positive way. I do however think that my students love to know when you're coming in and the old roster of Wednesday mornings was great as I could see the impact your sessions had on things like attendance’… Teacher 

    Based on this feedback, we have set up a calendar in the classroom so students know which days have Creative School sessions as there has been a lot of movement this term and will continue to be so. Where possible, we will keep the sessions on the same day but when it isn’t possible, they will be able to see it on the calendar. The sessions have had a positive impact on attendance and overall class participation and we want to maintain this. Each week they are curious about what we are going to be doing and are now making their own suggestions which Katy is sharing and we are taking on board and trying to implement. One of these was asking what they were going to do with their earth paint and whether it could have water added so they could continue to paint with it. The other was an idea for including maps based on Michael creating them in the sand outside of the classroom. 

  • Endangered animals above and below the Swan/Canning River, Year 5 Rostrata Primary School with Claire Davenhall and Nikki Barnett

    by Claire, 2 months ago
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    Session 12 - DATE 21.8.25

    90-minute session in the classroom: 

    Warm Up (one photo)

    Using their whiteboards and playing I AM NOT A…  They take turns to draw a shape from their animal, draw it on the whiteboard, and then the rest of the class imagines the shape as something else. They turn their boards round so we can all see.

    Main Activity (one photo)

    Researching for a brochure on threatened or endangered animals.You need to include;FRONT SHEET You need to include;- the name of the animal- a picture of the animal- your name and class- catchy slogan “Save the Numbat – A Tiny Aussie Treasure!”INSIDE 1- Scientific and common name of animal- Description of animal (size, colour, features)- Where it lives (habitat and location)- A fun fact to hook the readerINSIDE 2 You need to include;- The main threats to the animal- Human impacts that are threats- How many are left (if known)INSIDE  3 You need to include;- What is the community doing to help them- What can families do to help them- What organisations can people contact to help protect themBACK SHEET You need to include;- Any websites that you used put their URL hereMIDDLE SHEET You need to include;- Did you know facts- Glossary

    Paste your photo here. Reflection with the students (one photo)

    Wrap a length of wool around their animal in the creative habits colours. We tried to take off some of the plastic tape and just use knots to make it environmentally friendly. But this was actually harder that it looked.

     After the session: Planning with the Teacher

     (refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    Next week, they need to work on their reports again. Just remind them their animals are from the Swan/Canning river… some had ‘water rats can be found in Papua New Guinea.
    We can factor in a brain break next week as it lots to take in. 

    Working with students

     (what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

    Knots are still a problem.. I wonder if we have a knot-making warm-up to work on their fine motor skills..
    There is a game they can play that is similar to webs, but they tie the wool around their wrist when they share an idea, and at the end, they make a bracelet by knotting the wool.

    Ideas moving forward

     (ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DM0MGyfxv7R/?igsh=eG5teWl3ZjA4ZmZq

    Resources

     (do you need anything, who will source it?)Wool, glue, scissors, reports!

  • Session 9 Piara Waters - Andrea and Jasmine Year 7 Maths

    by Andrea Rassell, 2 months ago
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    DATE 22 August 2025 (rescheduled)

     


    Due to a surprise assembly we skipped the warm up today.



    Main Activity 

    Today was the culmination of the food drive we ran last term. We had Jennifer Keen, State Manager of Oz Harvest come to collect the food and we told her about the exercises we did last term on food insecurity. Jennnifer threw some more interesting statistics our way and we did a quiz. Jennifer gave out some brightly coloured and patterned food tape to help reduce waste to the winners. Then the kids helped her carry the food down to the yellow van with black graphics all over it. 

     

    Reflection with the students 

    This week we did the reflection passport from the resource document. The kids were asked to think about the creative habits and how they had individually used them to participate in the activities in the program. They thought about what passport “stamps” they would like to collect next.

     

    After the session:

     

    Planning with the Teacher

    We had a few unforeseen holdups with this session, originally planned at the end of term 2 and then again at the beginning of term 3. In retrospect it would be good to plan this kind of thing well in advance.


    Working with students

    This was a really nice culmination of the work we did last term. It really cemented the importance of statistics for the students in a real world context. The work they did in designing the flyers for the food drive came to fruition with about 20 bags and boxes collected and donated! 



    Ideas moving forward

    Next sessions are mostly planned but Jasmine sourced some pumpkin hand puppets that we can integrate into coming weeks.



    Resources

    Jasmine is sending out a worksheet for next week.


    How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)

    School facebook 

    Compass (intranet) to raise awareness with families 

    Andrea and Jasmine to share photos with each other via google drive 




  • Subiaco Primary Year 4s : Tanya & Jennie

    by Tanya Rodin, 2 months ago
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    DATE 21st August

    Warm Up 

    Creating Imaginary Underwater Creatures. 


    Each student was spread out around the room with their journal and three coloured textas. 

    When the music began everyone needed to move around the room like their bookweek character, when I stopped they all had 10 seconds to draw a squiggle on the blank pages. 


    Music/character dance break. 

    Then when music stopped they had 10 seconds to go to someone else's journal and turn the squiggle into a body shape. 

    Then dance. And then with a dance between; 

    • Add eyes.

    • Add limbs or fins.

    • Add texture

    • Add a special feature

    • Then they got to go back to their journals and give the creature a name. 


    Then for the last dance break they had to move like the creature that was just created. 


    Jennie Rocking her bookweek costume made by the class :) 

     

    Main Activity (one photo)

    Finishing off our woven tennis creatures.


    I used the warm up to help them open their imaginary lens to the potential of their tennis creatures. 

    They spent most of today's lesson finishing them off, and adding a little diagram to their journals with further description of its special features and why they chose the fabrics they did. 


    On the side Jennie, two of the more experienced student sewers and myself worked out a plan for our big doorstop creation lesson next week. 

     

    Reflection with the students 

    Students were reflecting in their journals after they finished their tennis racket creature, thinking about fabrics chosen and their link to wanting those colours. 

     

    After the session:

     

    Planning with the Teacher
     (refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    Successes:

    • The overalls were worn today for bookweek and Jennie looked amazing. And lots of the kids were so excited to show their creation to their parents. 

    • The weaving, they all really gave it a go, and got creative with their additions. 


    Working with students
     (what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

    Excited to use sewing machines next week! 


    Ideas moving forward
     (ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)

    Sewing the Doorstops; 

    • Needing to have stations planned out. 


    Resources
     (do you need anything, who will source it?)

    Sand, pillow fluff, precut jeans, precut face and hair additions, sewing machines. 


    How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)

    Excited to share it on market day. 



  • Session 14 - Walliston Primary School Year 5 - HASS Natural Disaster Management - Jake Bamford (Creative) and Kirsti Harris (Teacher)

    by Jake Bamford, 2 months ago
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    Session 14

     

    DATE - 21/08/2025

     

    The CREATIVE PRACTITIONER is to complete this document after each session. It is a tool to use weekly with your teacher to ensure you are reflecting and documenting the process. Please ensure your weekly reflection has been completed on Google Drive prior to submitting your invoice for that session as it is part of the payment. 

     

    90-minute session in the classroom:

     

    Warm Up (one photo)

    We dug out the ‘What am I’ game from a few sessions ago, but rather than use the official rules (one person holds a card to their head and asks questions about their card from thebother players, we came up with new rules. One person holds up the card, facing away from them, and the other people have to use non-verbal body language and acting (charades) to help the single player guess the card. There were opportunities for collaboration and persistence here, with 2-4 students doing the charades at once, but also trying to come up with unique ways to hint the graphic on the card.



    Paste your photo here.

     

    Main Activity (one pho

    With the end of the program looming, we let the students focus on designing their games. I chatted with them a bit before letting them take over, discussing board game prototyping processes and the checklist to help us ensure we have everything we need for our first playtest.


    They claimed various cardboard items and paper we brought in, and got to work designing boards, cards, and figures.

    Paste your photo here.

     

    Reflection with the students (one photo)

    We actually ran out of time for any kind of reflection activity, so we'll save it for next week when we invite the parents in for playtesting. 

    Paste your photo here.

     

    After the session:

     

    Planning with the Teacher
     (refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    Still some challenges for particular students/groups when collaborating and bringing their ideas together, but most of the class is underway with the production of their prototype. The true test will be next week, when the students must playtest the games with their parents.


    Working with students
     (what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

    The students are getting really into the construction of their board game prototypes. Working with the cardboard and designing/crafting the cards is keeping them engaged, but it will be interesting to see how it changes during and after a round of playtesting next week.


    Ideas moving forward
     (ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)

    Kirsti will invite parents and school staff to our session next week, to help us with playtesting, and to see the work the students have been doing in class. Set to be an exciting lesson!


    Resources
     (do you need anything, who will source it?)

    I may bring in extra cardboard and spare parts for students to use in their prototypes.


    How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)

    The playtesting next week will showcase the students’ progress on their board games to any parents or school staff who attend. We will also be doing our followup playtest and showcase of games and the creative election project at a Creative Schools Showcase at the school in a later week.



  • Legends from the Deep, Year 5/6, Walliston Primary with Claire Davenhall and Nathan Bushby

    by Claire, 2 months ago
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    Session 14 - DATE 27.8.25

    90-minute session in the classroom:

     

    Warm Up (one photo)

    🌊 Hand Shadow Ocean Creatures (10 mins)

    Materials: Light source + cardboard/picture frame.

    Instructions:

    1. In groups of 2–3, hold the frame up to the light to make shadows on the wall.

    2. Use your hands to create ocean animals (fish, crab, octopus, dolphin, waves).

    3. Take turns showing your creature in the frame while others guess what it is.


    They found this quite hard, but they stuck with it; it took way longer than I had intended. But it did mean everyone had something to practice with. Nathan found a box of torches, which really helped to move things along.

     

    Main Activity (one photo)

    Working on their stories and shadow box theatre.

    Legends of the Deep: Dragon Myths of the Indian Ocean. 

    I will bring in another box so they have 2 in the room.


    Print more storyboards… show some examples, get them to think about narrating, making additional sounds for each dragon to tell them apart.. Reading slowly but accurately, using different coloured lighting gels. One group used their iPads for background music. 


     

    Reflection with the students (one photo)

    Add colour to the great wave poster - that reflects the creative habits used in today's session.


    We set this up but ran out of time!


    After the session:

     

    Planning with the Teacher
     (refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    Next week, they will showcase their 1-minute shadow theatre legends of the deep. We will record it. Bring popcorn..  Give them 20 mins to get their stuff together and practice.




    Working with students
     (what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

     They have to be very persistent, getting to work with people the don't normally work with. It will be difficult if people have been away.  So in their 20mins they will have to adapt and change to suit everyone in the group. 


    Ideas moving forward
     (ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)

    do you want to invite leadership? 


    Resources
     (do you need anything, who will source it?)

    Boxes, lights popcorn… 


    How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)

    Do you want to invite leadership?  How would you like to showcase the work?

  • Session 13 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Jodie Davidson & Fiona Ball

    by Jodie Davidson, 2 months ago
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    Warm Up 

    1. You have 60 seconds to find a partner you have not worked with before

    2. You each have a post it note/piece of paper

    3. Give a 30 second pitch each about your urban design and why it should be adopted as a template for an urban garden design

     

    Main Activity

    Extension from session 12

    1. Back in the classroom, based on what you were told by your new partner write one piece of feedback about what could be included to improve the presentation - be specific 

    2. Find your mock up designs and the beginnings of your presentation poster

    3. Match your post it note feedback to the correct urban garden design presentation

    4. Reflect on the feedback. 

    5. Add one suggestion each for how it can be more persuasive

    6. Continue working on your presentation.

      1. What will it do? How? Why? 

      2. Why have you made these decisions?

      3. How it will reach the targets? 

      4. How will it help with cost of living and the impact of large scale farming and food production?

      5. Why are you growing these at home rather than relying on farms? 

      6. How does this impact biomes? (eg: Bird netting to prevent birds eating crops but not killing the birds? 

     

    Reflection with the students 

    1. Arrange the houses into a village considering the location of double story properties

    2. Include a road

    3. How might the layout impact those on either side with regards to light.

    4. Do you need to rearrange anything?


    Planning with the Teacher

    Successes

    • ‘Can I take mine home? I want to finish the artwork with my art pens’ …student

    • The quality of their presentations

    • How much they achieved today and how well they worked to bring their presentations to completion

    • The partnerships and collaboration of unlikely pairings has absolutely worked.

    • Ability to implement the feedback provided from the warm up activity

    • Sharing of information between groups

    Challenges

    • Didn’t get to do the house arrangement but Fiona will do this on Friday

    • The group of boys who are working as three and have manipulated the group to enable themselves to work together but can’t decide what each person could be doing


    Working with students

    Groups who would never speak to each other have put together an amazing presentation. They have completely different values and belief systems however have utilised the creative habits effectively. This is in such contrast to where we were at the beginning of the program.



    Ideas moving forward

    Give students Friday to finish any last minute components of their posters and building, arrange them into a community with consideration for how their designs may impact houses around them. Ensure the village layout is the best it can be so that it can be on display for Parent/Teacher interviews.

  • Session 13 - Somerly Primary School Year 3 - Jodie Davidson & Katy Hough

    by Jodie Davidson, about 2 months ago
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    Warm Up 

    DESIGNING YOUR OWN GROUP

    1. Standing in your own space, using only your body - show me a collaborative bilby, a disciplined spiny devil lizard, an imaginative tiger snake, a persistent emu, an inquisitive wallaby

    2. Your challenge is to create your own group - There will be a prize for the winning group today. 

    3. Each group must have

      1. one person who is good at details (cutting around pictures)

      2. one person is good at research 

      3. one person who is good at reading maps

    4. In your group decide on a name (write this on the board - columns)

    5. In your group discuss what you might need to do to help each other win the prize - 1 minute

     

    Main Activity 

    We will look at various Australian children’s picture books to link into the 80th Anniversary celebrations of the CBCA Book Week and to encourage positivity around reading.

    1. There are different parts of your challenge with points awarded at the end of each challenge. The group with the most points at the end wins. The challenge will determine how well your group can use all five of the creative habits.

    2. Cut out as many animals and their names as you can and glue them onto individual pieces of coloured card - each group has a different colour - 5-10 minutes

    3. Tally the number for each group and add to the board 

    4. Looking inside the picture books, how many states can you find where this animal lives in the wild? Sort them into piles - 5-10 minutes

    5. Tally one point for each correct location

    6. There is something sneaky happening…there are 7 non native animals - 6 are on the first page and 1 is on the second. Can you spot them - 5 minutes

    7. One point for each correct answer

    8. If you listened carefully and heard any clues for your remaining animals, you have 5 minutes to place them in the places where they can be found

    9. Tally one point 


    Crunch and Sip - Read ‘A is for Australian Animals’ by Frane Lessac and listen for clues


    Optional extra for early finishers

    • Group animals - how many of each do we have?

    • Add animals to the map by finding their location and pinning them in the correct state

    • How many extra animals do we need to complete our sets?

     

    Reflection with the students 

    1. Reflecting back on your choices of creative animals, pick the animal that you think represents the creative habit the whole class used most today.

    2. How would you choose to colour your animal to represent this habit? You can include a logo, a cape, accessories (cane, glasses, suitcase etc)


    After the session:

    Successes

    • Doing the warm up outside was so much better than being in the classroom

    • Participation continued to improve throughout the session, as did their group collaboration

    • Extending their time after tallying their first set of points to complete tasks and build on their scores. 

    • Their interest in the animal sculptures brought in and guessing what was inside each of them

    • Ongoing attention to the tasks, particularly collaboration, discipline and persistence.

    • The number of cards that each group completed today, their cutting out and identifying non native animals

    Challenges

    • Some of the groupings were challenging for them to begin with however as the session progressed along with the competition, each group developed tasks and implemented creative habits in working together effectively

    • Katy is really challenged for time at the moment so trying to get everything pinned up onto the board so that the students can see it and relate to the different areas throughout the country is taking longer than we anticipated

    • We didn’t get through the entire main activity however we will continue the rest in our next session. We like that we are able to shuffle things along depending on student engagement.


    Working with students

    Bringing them back to attention is happening much quicker as is their ability to work with different people. We shuffled the groups today and although they were able to choose their own group based on the criteria, we did ask them to mix them up so that they weren’t all boy or girl groups. Giving them time to organise this themselves took longer but proved effective in the long run with every group working together. They are interested in the different animals which we hope will eventually also help them to understand Australian states, their features and landmarks. 

  • Session 13Life Above and Below the Swan/Canning River, Year 5 Rostrata Primary School, Claire Davenhall and Nikki Barnett

    by Claire, about 2 months ago
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    Session 13 - DATE 27.8.25

     

    90-minute session in the classroom:

     

    Warm Up River Connections Web

    Time: 10-15  minutes
    Materials: Ball of wool/yarn, scissors

    Steps:

    1. Circle Gathering (1 min)

      • Students sit in a circle with the teacher holding a ball of wool.

      • Teacher explains: “We are going to make a web of learning to show how our discoveries about the Swan/Canning River connect us.”

    2. Sharing Discoveries (5–6 min)

      • The teacher starts by holding the end of the wool around their wrist and sharing something important they’ve discovered about the river (e.g., “I learned that black swans are the Noongar totem and very special to this place”).

      • After sharing, they throw the ball of wool across the circle to another student.

      • That student loops the wool around their wrist, shares their discovery, and throws it on to another student.

      • Continue until everyone has shared and the circle has formed a woven web of connections.

    3. Reflection on the Web (1–2 min)

      • Pause to look at the web created.

      • Ask: “What does this web show us about our learning and how we are connected?”

      • Emphasise that their knowledge, like the river, is interconnected.

    4. Cutting & Bracelet Making (2 min)

      • Carefully cut the wool between students.

      • Each student ties their piece into a simple bracelet or knot around their wrist.

      • Teacher says: “This bracelet is a reminder of your connection to the river and to each other.”


     

    Main Activity (one photo)

    Researching for a brochure on threatened or endangered animals from last week continued.

     

    Reflection with the students (one photo)

    Wrap wool and tie knots around their totem animal. These are looking fabulous! 

     

    After the session:

     

    Planning with the Teacher
     (refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    The warm up took longer than expected, but it was lovely to hear all the things they have learnt about the swan/canning River and share their learning with the group. 


    Working with students
     (what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

    They are curious about eating the animals in the river now.. Jellyfish  is a special dish! 


    Ideas moving forward
     (ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)

    Finish off the report leaflet - call to action signs and collage an animal to go on our river..


    Resources
     (do you need anything, who will source it?)

    I will bring brown tape, pop sticks and stones


    How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)

    Showcase is booked for the 9th Sept, Claire is away so Niki take lots of photos for me!

Page last updated: 06 Oct 2025, 02:08 PM