MissSarajevo
Member
- Joined
- Jul 20, 2007
- Messages
- 251
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2005
I personally believe this is a good idea to know more about abos. Right now I dont know a single aborigne person, and never spoken to one in my entire life.
Go to Redfern.I personally believe this is a good idea to know more about abos. Right now I dont know a single aborigne person, and never spoken to one in my entire life.
I feel that the fact that my local member is heterosexual is homophobic.I feel that the lack of a compulsory uni course about homosexuals is homophobic.
Am sending a letter to my local member about it.
Yes, if they make me spend six months studying them (after numerous courses in primary and secondary school) I will respect them a whole lot more.Your own responses show why such a unit is needed
I'm already feeling it now. There's only so much to learn, and forcing this on us is no way to guarantee racial harmony. There is a point where this cultural respect is going to go overboard, and mandatory education from the ages of 5-25 is that point....I can see something like this actually causing more resentment towards Aboriginals by students who's time and money is being wasted.
There is only so much history that is relevant/important, and that is well and truly covered in school, and Aboriginal culture has absolutely no relevance to me or, I assume, many others who will have to go through more of this. Does anyone know the actual intention of this proposition?maybe it pops up in almost every subject because of its relevance to Australia's history and present state??? I agree that undertaking the course shouldn't be a financial burden to the students if it was to be compulsory.
Maybe access schemes (such as the many Indigenous access schemes already available!) are an adequate means of increasing access and retention, but not this. Also, I don't see how teaching us about Aboriginal culture will make people less racist.SMH said:The main goals were access and retention and addressing individual or institutional racism.
There is no fathomable reason as to why we should implement this course of action whatsoever, it would most likely have negative effects rather than positive ones.maybe it pops up in almost every subject because of its relevance to Australia's history and present state??? I agree that undertaking the course shouldn't be a financial burden to the students if it was to be compulsory.
Exactly my feelings. But from what I could gather from the article it sounded as though Gillard was merely humouring the Indigenous Student Committe (or whatever it's name was) and is not entirely serious about this, which is fortunate.There is no fathomable reason as to why we should implement this course of action whatsoever, it would most likely have negative effects rather than positive ones.
Forcing people into trying to understand something they don't want to doesn't work.
At the end of the day the 'problem' and i say this in complete honesty, does not lie with us. I see more racism coming from the aboriginal community than from white folks these days, wish we would just hand over tasmania to them as they probably wouldn't survive more than 5 years.
What I don't understand is, like, how come we kept having to learn about Aboriginals in history at school?maybe it pops up in almost every subject because of its relevance to Australia's history and present state??? I agree that undertaking the course shouldn't be a financial burden to the students if it was to be compulsory.
Yeah but, here is where I am concerned.The fact that you say they had no history until european colonisation is either just ignorant or aragont of you, perhaps both. The idea that you are looking at 'History' from a purely european perspective and not considering others leaves your argument flawed when dealing with such a topic. But even through a european perspective 'History' may usually be studied through written records but any archaeologist or anthropologist would tell you that they study History through the use of methods others then literary.
As far as i remember, or atleast from what I was taught in high school, all that we did learn about Aboriginal culture/history was through interaction with white Australian history anyway or history since European colonisation.
The comments about sending them all to Tasmania just further highlights why such a course is being considered to counter the ignorance and disrespect of a culture and people that have occupied and survived in Australia for a scientifically agreed minimum of 40,000 years.