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Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Report, Nola Purdie et al, Indigenous languages programmes in Australian schools: a way forward, 2008
Currently, over 16,000 Indigenous students and 13,000 non-Indigenous students located in 260 Australian schools are involved in an Indigenous language program. More than 80 different Indigenous languages are taught. This project sought to present practice which would strengthen the quality of Indigenous language programs in schools. The report consists of a literature review, a mapping exercise to document current practices relating to Indigenous languages in Australian schools, an analysis of existing models of teacher preparation, and six case studies of good practice examples.colour illustrations, tables, word listseducation, curriculum development, language revival, language maintenance programs -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Conference proceedings, Jon Reyhner, Learn in beauty : Indigenous education for a new century, 2000
Series of papers indicating some of the new directions that Indigenous education is taking at the beginning of the twenty-first century. The focus is on education for Native Americans.b&w illustrations, graphs, tablesbilingual education, indigenous language teaching, american indian education, navajo immersion project -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Conference proceedings, Nigel Crawhill, Creating outsiders : endangered languages, migration and marginalisation : proceedings of the ninth FEL Conference, Stellenbosch, South Africa 18-20 November 2005, 2005
Outward Migration & Endangered Languages; Inward Migration & Endangered Languages; First Peoples; Policy, Power & Endangered Languages; States & Minorities; Migrations in History & Prehistorymaps, b&w photographs, tablesendangered languages, language revival, migration, linguistic diversity -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Conference proceedings, Tania Ka'ai, Language endangerment in the 21st century : globalisation, technology and new media : proceedings of the conference FEL XVI, 12-15 September 2012, AUT University, Auckland, Aotearoa/?New Zealand, 2012
Session 1: Technology and Cultural knowledge: Documentation, transmission and resource Session 2: Television and Endangered Languages Session 3: Technology: Archiving, Lexicography, Translation, Databases Session 4: Technology: Teaching and Learning endangered languages Session 5: Social media, press and endangered languages Session 6: Multiple perspectives on language endangerment in the 21st centuryMaps, b&w photographs, tablesendangered languages, language revival, globalisation, technology, barngarla, port lincoln -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Barry J. Blake, Australian aboriginal languages : a general introduction, 1981
Excellent non-technical introduction to the general study and characteristics of Aboriginal languages, including notes on many areas of grammar and culture.Colour photographs, tables, word listsvocabulary, linguistics, language and culture -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, John Henderson, Language in native title, 2002
Introduction /? John Henderson and David Nash Language and native title /? John Henderson Linguistic evidence and native title cases in Australia /? Peter Sutton Linguistic continuity in colonised country /? Jeanie Bell Country and the word: linguistic evidence in the Croker Sea claim /? Nicholas Evans Linguistics and the Yorta Yorta native title claim /? Heather Bowe The language of the Peak Hill Aboriginal people: a linguistic report in a native title claim /? Tamsin Donaldson Labels, language and native title groups: the Miriuwung-Gajerrong case /? Greg McIntyre and Kim Doohan Historical linguistic geography of south-east Western Australia /? David Nash Language ownership: a key issue for native title /? Michael Walsh Can lexicostatistics contribute an absolute time-scale to discussions of continuity of occupation in native title determinations? /? Barry Alpher Linguistic stratigraphy and native title: the case of ethnonyms /? Patrick McConvell Making your skin fit properly: displaced equivalence in 'skin' systems in the Barkly /? Gavan BreenMaps, tables, b&w diagramsyorta yorta, yoda yoda, yabala yabala, bangerang, shepparton, miriuwung, gajerrong, native title -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, D Victoria Rau et al, Documenting and revitalizing Austronesian Languages, 2007
Part 1: International capacity building initiatives, Part 2: Documentation and revitalization Activities, Part 3: Computational methods and tools for language documentation.Maps, b&w photographs, tableslanguage and elearning, endangered languages, austronesian languages -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Barry J Blake, Dialects of Western Kulin, Western Victoria : Yartwatjali, Tjapwurrung, Djadjawurrung, 2011
Technical linguistic grammar based on historical sources of Western Kulin languages Yartwatjali, Tjapwurrung and Djadjawurrung. Includes dictionary and information on historical source material.Maps, b&w illustration, tables,yartwatjali, tjapwurrung, djadjawurrung, western district, george augustus robinson, edward stone parker, william thomas, james dawson, edward curr, robert hamilton matthews -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Ruth Learner, Indigenous languages of Victoria, revival and reclamation : Victorian Certificate of Education study design, 2004
Course design of Victorian Certificate of Education, on Indigenous languages of Victoria. Includes word lists.colour photographs, word lists, tablesvictorian certificate of education examinations, secondary school education, victorian education, indigenous art, worawa college -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Farzad Sharifian et al, Understanding stories my way : Aboriginal-English speaking students (mis)understanding of school materials in Australian English, 2012
Acknowledgements Foreword Chapter 1: Introduction - Backgroung - Approach and methodology Chapter II: Findings Chapter III: educational applications and implications of this research References.colour illustrations, colour photographs, tablesbilingual education, two way literacy and learning, aboriginal english, western australian education, schema theory, cultural schemas, bidialectal education -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Kimberley Language Resource Centre, Guide to writing languages of the Kimberley, 2000
Includes notes on pronunciation, South Kimberley orthography, and an inventary of orthographies. Has small black and white illustrations.Maps, b&w illustrations, tableskimberley, bardi, bunuba, gajirrawoong, gamberre, gooniyandi, gwini/kwini, jaru, juwaliny, karajarri, kija, kukatja, malngin, mangala, miriwoong, ngardi, ngarinyin, nyangumarta, nyikina, nyuinyul, walmajarri, wangkajunga, wanyjirra, warrwa, worla, worrorra, wunambal, yawuru, yulparlja -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Steve Morelli, Gumbaynggirr dictionary and learner's grammar =? Gumbaynggirr bijaarr jandaygam, ngaawa gugaarrigam, 2008
Maps, b&w illustrations, tablesgumbaynggirr, nambucca -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Ian D Clark, That's my country belonging to me : Aboriginal land tenure and dispossession in nineteenth century Western Victoria, 1998
Investigating the dispossession of Aboriginal people from their lands in Western Victoria. The methods of dispossession (exclusion etc.) and restrictions, with the consequences of this.maps, tables, b&w photographsdjab wurrung, dhauwurd wurrung, bargundidj, djadja wurrung, djagurd wurrung, gadubanud, girai wurrung, gulidjan, jardwadjali, watha wurrung, wergaia, western victoria, land tenure -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Ian D Clark, The journals of George Augustus Robinson, Chief Protector, Port Phillip Aboriginal Protectorate : volume four, 1 January 1844 - 24 October 1845, 2000
The journals of George Augustus Robinson (1788-1866), the Chief Protector of Aborigines of Port Phillip from 1839- March 1850 are a rich source of historical and ethnohistorical information. His voluminous private papers and journals were acquired by the Mitchell Library in NSW in 1939. The publications of Robinson's journals is an important addition to the already published material, for they offer insights into the state of relations between Aboriginal people and Europeans in the districts visited.document reproductions, colour illustrations, tablesgeorge augustus robinson, port phillip, colonisation -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, Bringing them home : National Inquiry into the separation of Aboriginal and Torres Straight Islander children from their families, 1997
A tribute to the strengths and struggles of many thousands of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people affected by forcible removal. It acknowledges the hardship they endured and the sacrifices they made. Dedicated to those who found the strength to tell their stories to the Inquiry and to the generations of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people separated from their families and communities. Includes stories and recommendations.maps, b&w photographs, tableschild protection, institutional care, australian aboriginal history, aboriginal children, social justice -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Department of Education and Early Childhood Development, Languages : expanding your world : plan to implement the Victorian Government's vision for languages education 2013-2025, 2013
A long term government plan to increase diversity of language learning and proficiency across Victorian schools.colour photographs, colour illustrations, tableslanguage and education, bilingualism, language revival, government school education, program certification, certificate of language proficiency, education policy -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, National Indigenous languages survey report 2005, 2005
The National Indigenous Languages Survey Report 2005 highlights that: of an original estimated 250 known Australian Indigenous languages, only 18 languages are now considered 'strong' and have speakers in all age groups; about 110 Indigenous languages are still spoken by older people but are endangered; words and phrases are still in use and there is community support in many parts of the country for reclamation and learning programs for many other languages which are no longer fully spoken; communities around Australia possess many of the elements required to keep Indigenous languages strong or to reclaim them. They have skilled and devoted language workers and teachers, excellent teaching materials, good documentation of languages and active community language centresmaps, colour photographs, tables, graphsaboriginal english, education, aiatsis, fatsil, language endangerment, language maintenance, language revival, language policy, language proficiency -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Pat Dodson et al, Recognising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in the Constitution : report of the expert panel, 2012
Current multiparty support has created a historic opportunity to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the first peoples of Australia, to affirm their full and equal citizenship, and to remove the last vestiges of racial discrimination from the Constitution. The Expert Panel was tasked to report to the Government on possible options for constitutional change to give effect to Indigenous constitutional recognition, including advice as to the level of support from Indigenous people and the broader community for these options. This executive summary sets out the Panel's conclusions and recommendations" [taken from executive summary]. Report contains draft Bill for an Act to alter the Constitution to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and their cultures, languages and heritage, to replace racially discriminatory provisions and to include a prohibition of racial discrimination. Letter to the Prime Minister Foreword from the co-chairs Executive summary Introduction: Expert panel and its methodology 1. Historical background 2. Comparative and international recognition 3. The national conversation: themes from the consultation program 4. Forms of recognition 5. The 'race' provisions 6. Racial non-discrimination 7. Governance and political participation 8. Agreement-making 9. The question of sovereignty 10. Approaches to the referendum 11. Draft bill Appendixes Bibliography.maps, tables, colour photographs, chartsconstitutional history, legislation, australian constitution, constitutional law, closing the gap, 1967 referendum, white australia policy, sovereignty -
National Wool Museum
Tin
CEREBUS NUTRITIVE Table Salt Alumitextile mills textile mills, textile mills -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Map, Aerial Photographs Nunawading, 1970
State Aerial Survey, Melbourne 1970.State Aerial Survey, Melbourne 1970. Project runs 34 - 39 - City of Nunawading. Frames numbered from South to North boundaries, each strip numbered from East to West. See table of index and photo numbers attached.non-fictionState Aerial Survey, Melbourne 1970.state aerial survey, aerial photographs, nunawading, mitcham, blackburn, blackburn north, blackburn south, forest hill, vermont, burwood east, vermont south -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Document - Circular, Department of Crown Lands and Survey. Complete list of weeds declared noxious in the State of Victoria, 1964-1972
Chart prepared by Vermin and Noxious Weeds branch. Plants proclaimed under the Noxious Weeds Act 1928 (No 3799) for the State of Victoria.. Plants proclaimed within certain Municipalities of Victoria. Includes tables of Chemical Treatment and other remarks.Large circular - Complete list of weeds proclaimed noxious within the State of Victoria and for certain Municipalities and table of quantities for chemical treatment together with brief instructions for treatment of Noxious Weeds (Vermin and Noxious Weeds Act 1928)weeds, vermin and noxious weeds act 1928, chemical treatment of weeds -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Furniture - Table, Johann A. Landmann, 1853
This decorative octagonal inlaid table was made by Johann Landmann as a wedding present to his wife and was donated to Flagstaff Hill by the wife of Landmann's great-grandson. Landmann (or Landman, also known as August Landmann) was born in 1826 in Ganhor, Silesia, Prussia. At the age of 20, he travelled through Europe, working from town to town as a cabinet maker. At 26 years old he returned to Germany, married Anna Rosina in Wahlstatt, Prussia, and on the same day sailed for Australia on the Wilhelmsburg in 1853, the year the ship was registered. The Wilhelmsburg was a three-masted, square-rigged sailing ship built at Reiherstieg, Hamburg, and registered in Hamburg on 27th April 1853. On her maiden voyage in 1853, the ship sailed from Hamburg, Germany, to Australia with 510 passengers on board, including emigrants under the Bounty Scheme. Johan Landmann was one of the passengers. The Wilhelmsburg arrived in Hobson’s Bay, Melbourne after sailing for 100 days. Johann spent a week in Melbourne then travelled to Warrnambool aboard the Merry Kitty, arriving fourteen days later. Johann had landed in Melbourne with only 16 shillings in his pocket and by the time he arrived in Warrnambool, he only had one shilling and sixpence left. He also had very limited ability to speak English. He settled in the Allansford area, near Warrnambool, together with other families from Germany and went on to play a significant role in the history of Warrnambool. Johann worked as a cabinet maker in Warrnambool, making the first coffin in the Warrnambool cemetery. He also worked as a general merchant. He built many of the earliest shops in Warrnambool, and the first paddle boat used on the local Hopkins River. He made models of Warrnambool’s Ozone Hotel and Presbyterian Church; the model of the Hotel is now in the Warrnambool Art Gallery, and the model of the Presbyterian Church has been in the care of the Warrnambool & District Historical Society since around 2017. One of Landmann's residences was a two-storey building in Henna Street Warrnambool where he, lived upstairs and operated his business downstairs. After he retired Landmann built a ‘handsome stone residence’ at 30 Mickle Street, Warrnambool, where he lived until his death in June 1920; he was aged ninety-five. “Landmann Street” in Warrnambool has been named after Johann and appears on a map in 1872. He has also been honoured on Warrnambool’s Pioneer Memorial Board which is displayed at the Warrnambool and District Historical Society. Landmann's son Adolph Fritz Landmann (Fritz Landmann) born in 1861, was a Councillor from 1905 to 1915, and Mayor of Warrnambool from 1912 to 1915. The Wilhelmsburg sailed from Hamburg in 1863 heading for Queensland, Australia, but in December the vessel was wrecked off the coast of Holland during storms, with the loss of 247 lives.The table is significant as an early Warrnambool historical artefact with a connection to the maiden voyage of the ship Wilhelmsburg a vessel that holds the record for the number of passengers carried in one journey on a small vessel. Johann Landmann is regarded as a significant and historical figure in the development of Warrnambool as one of the earliest pioneers, not only as a businessman but the civic duties he undertook. First as a councilman and later the mayor of Warrnambool.Table, wooden, inlaid octagonal, two tiered with eight pillar supports and seven turned legs (one leg missing). Two large cracks in table top. A handwritten inscription is beneath the table top.Inscription is indecipherable. shipwrecked coast, flagstaff hill, flagstaff hill maritime museum, shipwrecked artefact, warrnambool, table, octagonal table, inlaid woodwork, wilhelmsburg, johann landmann, augustus landmann, fritz landmann (warrnambool mayor), ozone hotel warrnambool, inlaid table -
Bendigo Military Museum
Accessory - FIELD DRESSING, 12.1941
Item re Frederick Gardner DAVEY DFC No 410533 RAAF. Refer Reg No 3536P for his service details.Cloth bag containing x 2 First Field Dressings each in a waterproof cover. Instructions for use printed on the front.dressings, medical, wounds -
Bendigo Military Museum
Accessory - DRESSING, BANDAGE & COLOUR PATCH, 1) Johnson & Johnson, 1) 14.2.1985, .2) March 1991
.1) Wound dressing in dark green waterproof pack. .2) Triangular bandage. .3) Red Cross colour patchmedicine - first aid, dressings, patches -
Running Rabbits Military Museum operated by the Upwey Belgrave RSL Sub Branch
Belt
Army Webbing. US Style with Bum Pack, water bottle, 2 Pouches & Webbing straps, Rope and Field Dressingequipment, vietnam, army -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Document - BERT GRAHAM COLLECTION: BACK TO BENDIGO EAST 50TH BIRTHDAY SOCIAL
Paperwork relating to the erection of a brick dressing pavilion at Eastern Park Bendigo indicating General Conditions for contractors. 11 pages.clubs, social, bendigo east swimming club -
Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Container - Bottle, Swallow and Ariell salad dressing, excavated from cesspit at All England Eleven Hotel, 1850s - 1860s
Dug from ground at demolished 282 Rouse Street in 1999 and donated by Peter LIBBISS&A salad dressing bottle from group of 1850/1860s bottles dug up at 282 Rouse Street in 1999:S&Adomestic life - containers, business and traders - hotels, all england eleven hotel -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Equipment - First Aid Kit
Metal First Aid Kit with clasped lid containing various medical aids. Cotton wool, bandages and field dressings.On Lid - 6545-66-019-9803. First Aid Kit General Purpose Seatomedical, first aid, first aid kit, seato -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Literary Work, Speech given at the unveiling ceremony of the framed picture of ARVN soldier at Australian Vietnam Vetereans Museum - Phillip Island, Vic. & also a coloured photo of the VIP's at the ceremony, 2018
The photo was taken at the unveiling ceremony & includes the delegation, plus Phil Dressing & Laurie Jones next to the Canberra bomber at the NVVM.national vietnam veterans museum - speeches -
Mt Dandenong & District Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, Tea Tables at "Shiloah"
Originally the home of Isaac Jeeves, brother of Ellis Jeeves, ‘Shiloah’ was enlarged to take guests in the early 1900s. It was situated close to a beautiful fern gully and Isaac and his family capitalised on this by setting out walking tracks through the ferns. They charged 1/- to walk through and this included afternoon tea in a garden setting. ‘Shiloah’ was a popular tourist attraction but the making of the Olinda Creek Road destroyed the fern gullies and, by the 1930s, it was all finished. This photograph shows the tea tables at 'Shiloah' where Selina Jeeves and her daughter Elsie served afternoon tea to visitors.Black and white photograph taken from a Rose Series postcard showing tables set up in an exterior courtyard with bench seating.On front - Rose Series P. 170 A SHADY BOWER "SHILOAH" MT DANDENONG. VIC.shiloah, isaac jeeves the younger, guest house, afternoon tea, ferns, selina jeeves, elsie jeeves