Tax and welfare on the home front - Critical use of sources

SubjectHistory YearYear 9 CurriculumAC v9.0 Time60

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Introduction

Students analyse a range of primary and secondary sources related to the home front during World War II, including sources that tell of the cost of war on individuals and the community. For each source, they identify the intended purpose and audience, the creator’s perspectives, values and motives and evaluate its usefulness and reliability.

Australian Curriculum or Syllabus

Achievement standard

By the end of Year 9, students explain the historical significance of the period of the early modern world up to 1918. They explain the causes and effects of events, developments, turning points or movements globally, in Australia and in relation to the First World War or in an Asian context. They describe the social, cultural, economic and/or political aspects related to the changes and continuities in a society or a historical period. Students explain the role of significant ideas, individuals, groups and institutions connected to the developments of this period and their influences on the historical events.

Students develop and modify questions about the past to inform historical inquiry. They locate, select and compare primary and secondary sources, and use information in sources as evidence in historical inquiry. They explain the origin, content, context and purpose of primary and secondary sources. Students compare sources to determine the accuracy, usefulness and reliability of sources as evidence. They explain causes and effects, and patterns of continuity and change connected to a period, event or movement. Students compare perspectives of significant events and developments, and explain the factors that influence these perspectives. They analyse different and contested historical interpretations. Students use historical knowledge, concepts and terms to develop descriptions, explanations and historical arguments that acknowledge evidence from sources.

Students sequence events and developments within a chronological framework, with reference to periods of time and their duration. When researching, students develop different kinds of questions to frame a historical inquiry. They interpret, process, analyse and organise information from a range of primary and secondary sources and use it as evidence to answer inquiry questions. Students examine sources to compare different points of view. When evaluating these sources, they analyse origin and purpose, and draw conclusions about their usefulness. They develop their own interpretations about the past. Students develop texts, particularly explanations and discussions, incorporating historical interpretations. In developing these texts and organising and presenting their conclusions, they use historical terms and concepts, evidence identified in sources, and they reference these sources.

Content descriptions

Historical Knowledge and Understanding

The effects of World War I on Australian society, such as the role of women, political debates about conscription, relationships with the British Empire, and the experiences of returned soldiers. (AC9HH9K11)

Historical Skills

Identify the origin and content of sources, and explain the purpose and context of primary and secondary sources. (AC9HH9S03)

Explain the usefulness of primary and secondary sources, and the reliability of the information as evidence. (AC9HH9S04)

Student learning resources

Suggested activity sequence

This sequence is intended as a framework to be modified and adapted by teachers to suit the needs of a class group.

  1. Use a grouping strategy to organise students into groups of 5.
  2. Groups organise their sources into primary and secondary and share them among group members. Each student must have at least 3 sources, 2 of which must be primary sources.
  3. Students analyse the sources they have been given and record their analysis on the worksheet
  4. Students share their analysis with other group members.
  5. Groups organise sources in order of reliability, from the most reliable to the least reliable and explain their rankings.
  6. Discuss student findings, any differences and possible reasons why.