HISTORY YEAR 9 |
Code |
Content Description |
Human Rights Example |
ACOKFH016 |
- The nature and significance of the Industrial Revolution and how it affected living and working conditions, including within Australia.
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- Investigating the changing nature of the sources that provide a record of life in this period and identify the human rights experiences of different groups in Australia, especially treatment of workers.
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ACOKFH015 |
- The nature and extent of the movement of peoples in the period (slaves, convicts and settlers).
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- Identifying the number of slaves transported and recognising slavery as a human rights violation.
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ACOKFH017 |
- The extent of European imperial expansion and different responses, including in the Asian region.
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- Outlining the impact of the industrial revolution on human rights including the impact of mass production on workers.
- Recognising the impact of imperialism on human rights in Asian societies.
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ACOKFH019 |
- The emergence and nature of significant economic, social and political ideas in the period, including nationalism.
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- Recognising that the features relating to concepts of equality, egalitarianism and democracy are human rights.
- Recognising how events such as the French Revolution and American Independence contributed to ideas of equality and human rights.
- Recognising the role of classical models and theories on the invention of human rights values.
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ACDSEH080 |
- The population movements and changing settlement patterns during this period.
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- Describing the human rights impact of industrialisation on living conditions with a focus on women and children.
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ACDSEH081 |
- The experiences of men, women and children during the Industrial Revolution, and their changing way of life.
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- Investigating the human rights impact of industrialisation on working conditions including child labour.
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ACDSEH082 |
- The short and long-term impacts of the Industrial Revolution, including global changes in landscapes, transport and communication.
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- Outlining the long term impacts of industrial revolution on working conditions and worker’s rights.
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ACDSEH017 |
- The technological innovations that led to the Industrial Revolution, and other conditions that influenced the industrialisation of Britain (the agricultural revolution, access to raw materials, wealthy middle class, cheap labour, transport system and expanding empire) and of Australia.
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- Identifying the impact of the Industrial revolution on human rights including working conditions.
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ACDSEH019 |
- The emergence and nature of key ideas in the period, with a particular focus on ONE of the following: capitalism, socialism, egalitarianism, nationalism, imperialism, Darwinism, Chartism.
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- Explaining the impact of idea (capitalism, socialism, egalitarianism, nationalism, imperialism, Darwinism, Chartism) on the human rights of women, children, the poor, working conditions, freedom of expression and attitudes towards cultural diversity.
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ACDSEH086 |
- The reasons why ONE key idea emerged and/or developed a following, such as the influence of the Industrial Revolution on socialism.
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- Investigating the influence of marginalised groups on the emergence of a key idea such as Socialism or Chartism.
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ACDSEH087 |
- The role of an individual or group in the promotion of ONE of these key ideas, and the responses to it from, for example, workers, entrepreneurs, land owners, religious groups.
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- Explaining the role that marginalised groups had on promotion of one key idea.
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ACDSEH088 |
- The short and long-term impacts of ONE of these ideas on Australia and the world.
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- Discussing the short and long term impacts of one key idea on the rights of women, Indigenous peoples or other marginalised groups in Australia or globally.
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ACDSEH018 |
- The influence of the Industrial Revolution on the movement of peoples throughout the world, including the transatlantic slave trade and convict transportation.
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- Explaining how the Industrial Revolution impacted on the human rights of people of African descent.
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ACDSEH083 |
- The experiences of slaves, convicts and free settlers upon departure, their journey abroad, and their reactions on arrival, including the Australian experience.
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- Investigating sources that record the experiences of slaves and convicts and the impact of the experience on their human rights.
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ACDSEH084 |
- Changes in the way of life of a group(s) of people who moved to Australia in this period, such as free settlers on the frontier in Australia.
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- Investigating the experiences of convicts and identify how their human rights were breached.
- Describing the human rights impact of settlers or convicts on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples of the region.
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ACDSEH085 |
- The short and long-term impacts of the movement of peoples during this period.
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- Evaluating the impacts of the movement of peoples on the human rights of migrants, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders.
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ACDSEH093 |
- The key features (social, cultural, economic, political) of ONE Asian society (such as China, Japan, India, Dutch East Indies, India) at the start of the period.
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- Identifying the differing rights and treatment of various groups and laws and beliefs that relate to human rights in one Asian society.
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ACDSEH094 |
- Change and continuity in the Asian society during this period, including any effects of contact (intended and unintended) with European power(s).
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- Describing the effects of contact and its link with human rights abuses and exploitation in one Asian society.
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ACDSEH020 |
- The extension of settlement, including the effects of contact (intended and unintended) between European settlers in Australia and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
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- Explaining the effects of contact in terms of the human rights violations that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples experienced, including the forcible removal of children.
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ACDSEH089 |
- The experiences of non-Europeans in Australia prior to the 1900s (such as the Japanese, Chinese, South Sea Islanders, Afghans).
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- Outlining the human rights experiences of marginalised groups and the discrimination they faced prior to the 1900s.
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ACDSEH090 |
- Living and working conditions in Australia around the turn of the twentieth century (that is 1900).
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- Identifying the main features of housing, sanitation and education around 1900 and how these relate to human rights such as access to water, food, shelter, good working conditions and education.
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ACDSEH091 |
- Key events and ideas in the development of Australian self-government and democracy, including women’s voting rights.
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- Explaining the factors that contributed to the development of democracy in Australia especially women’s voting rights and discrimination against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
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ACDSEH092 |
- Legislation 1901-1914, including the Harvester Judgment, pensions, and the Immigration Restriction Act.
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- Investigating how the major social legislation affected people’s human rights including women’s rights, rights of seniors and the rights of migrants.
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ACDSEH095 |
- The places where Australians fought and the nature of warfare during World War I, including the Gallipoli campaign.
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- Exploring the human rights experiences of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people during World War 1 including the experiences of returned soldiers.
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ACDSEH096 |
- The impact of World War I, with a particular emphasis on Australia (such as the use of propaganda to influence the civilian population, the changing role of women, the conscription debate).
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- Investigating the human rights impact of World War I on various groups including women, German Australians and unionists in Australia.
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ACHHS164 |
- Use chronological sequencing to demonstrate the relationship between events and developments in different periods and places.
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- Representing the relationship between key human rights events and places in Australia using interactive timelines.
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ACHHS165 |
- Use historical terms and concepts.
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- Discussing the contestability of historical terms such as settlement, invasion and colonisation and identify how these terms can be perceived in relation to the rights of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
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ACHHS166 |
- Identify and select different kinds of questions about the past to inform historical inquiry.
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- Developing human rights related questions about the past treatment of women, and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples.
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ACHHS168 |
- Identify and locate relevant sources, using ICT and other methods.
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- Identifying historical human rights sources such as Australian Human Rights Commission inquiries into human rights issues such as children in immigration detention and the Stolen Generations.
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ACHHS171 |
- Evaluate the reliability and usefulness of primary and secondary sources.
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- Evaluating the reliability and usefulness of an Australian Human Rights Commission Report such as the Bringing Them Home Report from the Inquiry into the Stolen Generations.
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