Showing 1 - 9 of 9 results for Australian literature

Historical fiction in the classroom: reflecting on Our Australian Girl and Do You Dare?

By Jane Goodwin

Issue 91, Term 4 2014

Our Australian Girl is a fiction series for girls featuring characters from different eras in Australian history, between 1808 and 1983. There are currently ten female characters, each with four books to their name, and each story set during a 12–18 month period of their life. The series is aime

Explore AustLit; explore our storytelling heritage

By Dr Catriona Mills

Issue 92, Term 1 2015

Integrating Australian literature into the curriculum and the classroom? Have you explored AustLit, the most comprehensive source of information on Australian story-telling? What is AustLit? AustLit is, at its core, a scholarly bibliography of Australian narrative, story-telling, and print cult

A way home: Emily Brewin’s heartfelt dive into youth and resilience

By Emily Brewin

Issue 129, Term 2 2024

Your new book, A way home, came out in April. Tell us a little about its story. A way home is told from the point of view of Grace, who is 16 years old and living under a bridge in Melbourne’s CBD. She’s experiencing homelessness and we discover that she’s there because she’s grown up with a

Celebrating 80 years of Puffin

By Dot Tonkin

Issue 114, Term 3 2020

At the start of World War II, as British children faced mass evacuations on an unprecedented scale, Allen Lane, the founder of Penguin, said, ‘The worst has happened, but evacuated children are going to need books more than ever. Let us get out half a dozen as soon as we can.’ And so one of the wor

Reading Australia

By Josephine Johnston

Issue 128, Term 1 2024

As we start the new year with some new resolutions and the all-important goal to read more books, it is also timely to think of how we can encourage young Australians to read more Australian stories. We all know the benefits of reading – it makes us happier, healthier, financially secure and mo

Can a chatbot write like an Aussie?

By Bridget Forster

Issue 129, Term 2 2024

in youth literature that many of these biases and limitations can be made plain for students. By using AI-generated texts as a foil against authentic Australian literature, students can come to appreciate the nuance of stories created in their own locale. This involves the teacher librarian selectin

Australian Children’s Laureate 2024–25: Sally Rippin

By Interview article by the Schools Catalogue Information Service (SCIS)

Issue 129, Term 2 2024

Congratulations on your appointment as the Australian Children’s Laureate 2024–2025. Your theme as Laureate is ‘All kids can be readers’. Can you share what this theme means to you? What I’ll bring to my term as Laureate is the idea that reading isn’t something we’re all born with the capacity

Join the Educational Lending Right Survey: Shape the future of Australian literature and learning!

By Education Services Australia (ESA)

Issue 129, Term 2 2024

Lending rights payments are a significant part of my income and go a long way towards me being able to earn a living as a writer. – George Ivanof Here in Australia, we are lucky to have a government-funded Educational Lending Right (ELR) scheme that sees Australian authors, illustrators and publis

Language, literature and literacy during COVID-19 and beyond

By Annette Wagner

Issue 114, Term 3 2020

Over the last few months, learning has moved to the digital space, changing the perception of online learning tools. Annette Wagner, Creative Director of Story Box Library, discusses how teachers have embraced digital learning practices and online tools, including storytelling tools. During iso