The Times Australia
Google AI
The Times World News

.

3 key moments in Indigenous political history Victorian school students didn't learn about

  • Written by Mati Keynes, McKenzie Postdoctoral Research Fellow, The University of Melbourne
3 key moments in Indigenous political history Victorian school students didn't learn about

I never learned about this in school!

This is an all-too familiar response from those learning Indigenous histories in Australia.

The recent take-up of false claims – such as that a Voice to Parliament would result in “special privileges[1]” — suggests large gaps in public understanding of the Indigenous political movements that preceded the Voice.

Considering what children have learnt in our schools in the past, this should not surprise us.

Our research[2], soon to be published in the Nordic Journal of Educational History[3], shows that for over 100 years, the Victorian school curriculum has failed to give generations of students the chance to learn about Indigenous political movements.

What we did

Given Australia didn’t have a national curriculum until 2010, we looked at Victorian curriculum documents from the past 120 years to get a sense of what children have been taught over this time. We compared this with what Indigenous political campaigns were expressing at the time.

We found Indigenous political movements were largely missing from Victorian curriculum materials.

When they were included, it was in very limited ways that did not accurately reflect the diversity and depth of Indigenous standpoints, methods, and objectives.

We found the Victorian curriculum had routinely failed to grapple with Indigenous sovereignty.

In particular, we noticed there were three key moments in Indigenous political history that were missing.

Read more: The 1881 Maloga petition: a call for self-determination and a key moment on the path to the Voice[4]

1. 1880s Coranderrk Campaign

Coranderrk[5] was an Aboriginal reserve established by the colony of Port Philip in 1863 on Wurundjeri land.

The Wurundjeri community at Coranderrk, which also included people from other Kulin nations, cultivated a highly successful farm. Because this farm was coveted by settlers, they pressured the colonial government to shut down the reserve and sell the land.

Coranderrk Aboriginal Station sketch.
Coranderrk Aboriginal Station, 1889 sketch. Wikimedia Commons.

The Coranderrk community staged a sustained public campaign[6] to protect their land. They wrote letters and petitions to ministers and newspapers and sent deputations to Melbourne.

Their efforts culminated in the 1881 Parliamentary Coranderrk Inquiry[7].

The inquiry drew sustained attention to Aboriginal peoples’ aspirations for land and for the end of policies of “protection”. While ultimately unsuccessful, the inquiry and campaign created a lasting public record of Aboriginal activism and testimony. The Coranderrk campaign is crucial for understanding Aboriginal experiences of political processes.

Yet we found the Coranderrk campaign was not included at all in the historical Victorian curriculum documents we examined.

Instead, curriculum documents from this period tended to depict Aboriginal people as a “dying race”. They tended to justify settler violence as a “natural” response to adverse conditions on the colonial frontier.

2. 1960s-ending assimilation

The momentum of Aboriginal political movements grew in the post-war era.

There was the 1965 Freedom Ride[8] (modelled on those in the US) through New South Wales, and the fight to retain the sole remaining Aboriginal reserve at Lake Tyers[9] in Victoria in the same year. These exposed how assimilation legislation that claimed to enable Aboriginal people’s access to economic and social “equality” in fact only denied them those rights.

The modern land rights movement was born when in 1966, Vincent Lingiari[10] – a Gurindji man upon whose lands the Wave Hill cattle station was located – led a strike in protest of the poor working conditions the Gurindji people endured. This came to be known as the Wave Hill Walkoff.

It became a struggle for control over the land. The Gurindji people who were strikers remained for seven years as illegal “occupiers” of their own Country.

We found these growing aspirations for rights and land were not reflected in the curriculum. Through the mid-20th century until the late 1960s, the curriculum focused mainly on British history.

We found celebratory narratives of figures like Captain Cook, William Dampier and Major Mitchell, and the growth of industry and the Australian “nation”.

Where Indigenous people were present in the curriculum, they were presented as relics of the past rather than political agents in their own right.

‘The Coming of the White Man’ (1954) School Paper, photo reproduced with permission of B. Marsden.

3. 1988 Treaty campaign

On January 26 1988, as Australia celebrated the 200th anniversary of the arrival of the first fleet into Kamay (now Botany Bay), over 40,000 people marched[11] through the streets of Sydney with red, black and yellow protest banners and chants of “White Australia has a black history”.

A few months later, on Jawoyn country east of Katherine in the Northern Territory, the Northern and Central Land Councils presented the Barunga Statement[12] to then-prime minister Bob Hawke. It called for a treaty between the Commonwealth and Indigenous nations, and for the recognition of sovereignty.

Hawke committed[13] to work towards a treaty, but recognising prior Indigenous sovereignty proved a major stumbling block.

A later Senate Standing Committee[14] tasked with investigating the feasibility of a treaty recommended focusing on education and attitudinal change first.

Unfortunately this history was not well represented in the curriculum material we studied. This history is crucial for understanding how national representation and treaty have long been a part of Indigenous demands for political change. After the bicentenary protests, curriculum shifted[15] to include more Indigenous perspectives, but this was followed by backlash known as the “history wars[16]” (a divisive public debate about whether or not acknowledging past violence against Aboriginal people represented a “black armband view” of history).

Is Australia’s curriculum changing?

A new version[17] of the Australian curriculum (which is used by the states to guide their own curricula), was released in 2022 and will be implemented in coming years.

It includes a focus on “truth-telling” within the broader history of Australia. This could signal an important shift from past practices. (Unfortunately, this shift will occur after the Voice referendum).

But it may address some of the failings our research identified.

The new Year 10 course in the national curriculum suggests class discussion of the Day of Mourning[18], the Pilbara strike[19], the Wave Hill walk off, the 1972 Tent Embassy[20], and more.

The revised content[21] also lists for discussion key historical individuals, organisations, and the methods used[22] to campaign for change.

While highlighting Indigenous political movements can help build understanding of Indigenous aspirations, the curriculum still does not directly grapple with Indigenous sovereignty as a concept.

This is why organisations such as the National Indigenous Youth Education Coalition[23], through the Learn Our Truth campaign[24], have called for schools to reflect on what Indigenous sovereignty means and to teach the history of colonisation.

References

  1. ^ special privileges (theconversation.com)
  2. ^ Our research (findanexpert.unimelb.edu.au)
  3. ^ Nordic Journal of Educational History (journals.ub.umu.se)
  4. ^ The 1881 Maloga petition: a call for self-determination and a key moment on the path to the Voice (theconversation.com)
  5. ^ Coranderrk (www.coranderrk.com)
  6. ^ public campaign (www.minutesofevidence.com.au)
  7. ^ 1881 Parliamentary Coranderrk Inquiry (www.minutesofevidence.com.au)
  8. ^ Freedom Ride (aiatsis.gov.au)
  9. ^ Lake Tyers (www.abc.net.au)
  10. ^ Vincent Lingiari (www.nma.gov.au)
  11. ^ marched (deadlystory.com)
  12. ^ Barunga Statement (aiatsis.gov.au)
  13. ^ Hawke committed (theconversation.com)
  14. ^ Senate Standing Committee (catalogue.nla.gov.au)
  15. ^ curriculum shifted (www.theage.com.au)
  16. ^ history wars (www.mup.com.au)
  17. ^ A new version (v9.australiancurriculum.edu.au)
  18. ^ Day of Mourning (aiatsis.gov.au)
  19. ^ Pilbara strike (pilbarastrike.org)
  20. ^ 1972 Tent Embassy (theconversation.com)
  21. ^ revised content (v9.australiancurriculum.edu.au)
  22. ^ methods used (v9.australiancurriculum.edu.au)
  23. ^ National Indigenous Youth Education Coalition (www.niyec.com)
  24. ^ Learn Our Truth campaign (learnourtruth.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/3-key-moments-in-indigenous-political-history-victorian-school-students-didnt-learn-about-213756

Times Magazine

IPECS Phone System in 2026: The Future of Smart Business Communication

By 2026, business communication is no longer just about making and receiving calls. It’s about speed...

With Nvidia’s second-best AI chips headed for China, the US shifts priorities from security to trade

This week, US President Donald Trump approved previously banned exports[1] of Nvidia’s powerful ...

Navman MiVue™ True 4K PRO Surround honest review

If you drive a car, you should have a dashcam. Need convincing? All I ask that you do is search fo...

Australia’s supercomputers are falling behind – and it’s hurting our ability to adapt to climate change

As Earth continues to warm, Australia faces some important decisions. For example, where shou...

Australia’s electric vehicle surge — EVs and hybrids hit record levels

Australians are increasingly embracing electric and hybrid cars, with 2025 shaping up as the str...

Tim Ayres on the AI rollout’s looming ‘bumps and glitches’

The federal government released its National AI Strategy[1] this week, confirming it has dropped...

The Times Features

Australians Can Choose Their Supermarket — But Have Little Independence With Electricity

Australians can choose where they shop for groceries. If one supermarket lifts prices, reduces q...

Sweeten Next Year’s Australia Day with Pure Maple Syrup

Are you on the lookout for some delicious recipes to indulge in with your family and friends this ...

Operation Christmas New Year

Operation Christmas New Year has begun with NSW Police stepping up visibility and cracking down ...

FOLLOW.ART Launches the Nexus Card as the Ultimate Creative-World Holiday Gift

For the holiday season, FOLLOW.ART introduces a new kind of gift for art lovers, cultural supporte...

Bailey Smith & Tammy Hembrow Reunite for Tinder Summer Peak Season

The duo reunite as friends to embrace 2026’s biggest dating trend  After a year of headlines, v...

There is no scientific evidence that consciousness or “souls” exist in other dimensions or universes

1. What science can currently say (and what it can’t) Consciousness in science Modern neurosci...

Brand Mentions are the new online content marketing sensation

In the dynamic world of digital marketing, the currency is attention, and the ultimate signal of t...

How Brand Mentions Have Become an Effective Online Marketing Option

For years, digital marketing revolved around a simple formula: pay for ads, drive clicks, measur...

Macquarie Capital Investment Propels Brennan's Next Phase of Growth and Sovereign Tech Leadership

Brennan, a leading Australian systems integrator, has secured a strategic investment from Macquari...