The National Museum of Australia, in partnership with Gandel Philanthropy, has launched a pioneering digital initiative which will take Australian history into classrooms around the country.
Australia’s Defining Moments Digital Classroom (ADMDC) is an innovative teaching and learning website which offers rich resources for teachers and students of Australian History, Geography, and Civics and Citizenship.
In a year which has highlighted the value of online learning for students forced to study from home due to COVID-19, this unparalleled initiative is a resource for its time as it brings Australian history alive in the digital age and elevates the exploration of our national story in the classroom.
Students, primary and secondary, can explore Australian history via interactive online games and quizzes, animations, videos and virtual tours, plus teaching and learning activities, delivered to schools via a range of digital devices.
The freely available ADMDC draws on the National Museum’s highly respected Defining Moments in Australian History project, and was made possible by the generous $1.5 million donation by John Gandel AC and Pauline Gandel AC in 2018 to support the unprecedented education initiative.
Dr Mathew Trinca, National Museum Director, said the ADMDC is the classroom of the future. “It will empower teachers with information at their fingertips and inspire young people to embrace history and engage with the nation’s story in new and innovative ways,” Dr Trinca said.
Mr and Mrs Gandel said, “We are proud to have collaborated with the National Museum on this flagship grant. Much of our giving through Gandel Philanthropy is about providing opportunity for children across Australia, helping them to reach their potential. We believe this is something that will be realised through the ADMDC.”
David Arnold, Program Manager of Australia’s Defining Moments Digital Classroom, said: “A key element of the ADMDC is learning through direct experience and play. Students will develop research skills, begin to understand the significance of defining moments in history, and have the opportunity to reflect upon their knowledge.”
“The main aim of interactives is to encourage students to investigate and record what they consider to be defining moments in Australian history through the National Museum of Australia’s Landmarks gallery, their own life and their family’s history, and the history of their local community,” Mr Arnold said.
Marissa Beard, Schools and Engagement Manager, said, “This is an excellent one-stop shop for all areas of history content when students need reliable and trustworthy sources.”
The ADMDC includes numerous historic archival film clips from the National Film and Sound Archive.
Chief Engagement Officer at the Archive, Matt Ravier, said, “We are thrilled to have selected and contributed more than 50 titles from our collection. This footage brings to vivid life the moments that shaped us as a nation, empowering students to engage with our living memory and discover how history can inform their role as active citizens and builders of Australia’s future.”
Popular historian David Hunt has produced eight animated defining moments which will be used extensively on the ADMDC site to further engage students.
Significant defining moments include:
65,000+ years ago: Evidence of first peoples
1788: Arrival of the First Fleet
1792: Pemulwuy resists the colonists
1851: Gold rushes in New South Wales and Victoria begin
1872: Free, compulsory and secular education
1880: Ned Kelly’s last stand
1901: Federation of the Australian colonies
1902: Women granted the vote in federal elections
1915: Australian troops land at Gallipoli
1919: Influenza pandemic reaches Australia
1928: Bradman’s first century
1967: Indigenous referendum
1976: First arrival of Vietnamese refugees by boat
1978: First gay Mardi Gras
2000: Cathy Freeman lights the Sydney Olympic flame and wins the 400m
2009: Black Saturday bushfires
2010: First female prime minister and governor-general
Explore Australia’s Defining Moments Digital Classroom
www.digital-classroom.nma.gov.au