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Saturday, April 24, 2021

Women on the Australian Home Front in WW1

Part of the NSW Stage 5 History syllabus (the 'Australians at War' study) includes a dot point highlighting the role of women in WWI and WWII. I was led down a rabbit hole while researching this for WWI in particular and came up with the following lesson, which seemed to work well with my class last week. 

Anyway, here's the lesson:

1. Start with a definition activity for the word 'home front'. I actually do this for nearly all of my classes - History and English alike; I feel that improving metalanguage and general vocabulary is one of the key building blocks for learning. There's a lot of research in literacy that suggests that the best way to teach a new word is to get the students to use it in context, so I simply chuck the word up on the board and tell students to put it into a sentence, any sentence that makes sense, and I try to walk around checking on individual students to see how they've gone. It's a good settling routine.

2. After reinforcing the idea of the home front and what it is, have the class contribute to the construction of a mindmap that covers the lives of pre-war women in Australia. Branches of this mindmap could include things such as:

  • Division of labour - men worked, women ran the household. In poorer families, women helped with work. It was considered important to keep the father well-fed as he was the only 'working' parent a lot of the time. 
  • Women were housewives and their workload was intense - nearly all food was made from scratch and lots of clothes were too. Discuss things like the lack of refrigerators and how this might impact on home life, what would happen if clothing ripped, what a washboard was, etc.
  • Women were mothers - it was common in this era to have an average of 10 to 12 children.
  • Women's rights - women had gained the right to vote, state by state, only quite recently. The last state that established the right for women to vote was in 1911, only 3 years before the war broke out. 
This can then pivot into a class discussion of how the above might have changed once all the men went off to war. How would women have been impacted by this? 

3. Organise a lottery =- students draw letters (A to L) out of a hat or box [you'll need to just write these onto little slips of paper]. Students then search for their corresponding description in the following document; The Role of Women in WWI. After finding out what 'their' role might have been as a woman in WW1-era Australia, students should read the accompanying detail and respond to the following questions:

4. The Role of Women in World War I

A. What role did you get?
B. What was your role in World War I?
C. How did your role come about?
D. How helpful do you think you were in comparison to the other roles that have been listed?
E. How appreciative do you think people in Australia were of you at the time?
F. If there was a war like WWI today, do you think you would be needed in the same way? Why or why not?
G. Create a poster that advertises your role's contribution or belief. 

The above questions start at the simple and then move into the evaluative and empathy-based, with explicit regard given to context, thus highlighting continuity and change over time. 

I didn't plan it this way but this activity was timed well to coincide with ANZAC Day!

We will remember them. 

Lest we forget. 

1 comment:

  1. Thank you! I will be trying this with my Year 9 Class.

    ReplyDelete