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Stage 5 | History Program | Popular Culture Unit 2014

Year 10

TOPIC: Keep on rocking in the free world - Popular Culture 1945-now.

Stage 5

Year 10

(Depth Study: 5a - The Globalising World: Pop Culture)

Duration:

4 weeks (Semesterised course)

Detail:

10 hours/ approx 15 lessons (45 mins)

Historical Context of the Overview This unit is a study of popular culture - music, art, and more - from the period after 1945 in Australia and the world. The unit will require students to explore the ways in which popular culture was
affected by social, political and economic realities as well as how popular culture had an effect on these areas. A decade should form the focus on specific study to highlight the changes which
occurred at a particular moment in history. This will include a focus on specific musicians, artists and other personalities of that era and how they contributes to continuity or change in Australian
and global society. Students will engage in a range of historical thinking and working skills including source analysis and presentation of ideas in various forms.

Key Inquiry Questions -

Historical Skills - the highlighted skills are targeting in this unit.

How did the nature of global conflict (Cold War) affect popular culture in the 20th
century?

Comprehension: chronology, terms and concepts

read and understand historical texts

What were the consequences of WWII? How did these consequences shape the
modern world?

use historical terms and concepts in appropriate contexts (ACHHS165, ACHHS183)

How was Australian society affected by other significant global events and changes in
this period?

sequence historical events to demonstrate the relationship between different periods, people and
places (ACHHS164, ACHHS182)

Framing Questions

Analysis and use of sources

identify different types of sources

identify the origin, content, context and purpose of primary and secondary sources (ACHHS169,
ACHHS187)

Conceptual Q - What influences had the greatest effect on Australian society from
overseas?

process and synthesise information from a range of sources as evidence in an historical


argument (ACHHS170, ACHHS188)

Contestable Q - Has Australia made a significant and lasting impact on global pop
culture?

evaluate the reliability and usefulness of primary and secondary sources for a specific historical
inquiry (ACHHS171, ACHHS189)

Content Q - What major changes occurred in popular culture in Australia after 1945?

This unit of work was written by Matthew Esterman, St. Scholasticas College, Glebe. Copyright of the unit of work is owned by AISNSW.
NSW syllabus content prepared by the Board of Studies, Teaching and Educational Standards NSW for and on behalf of the State of New South Wales is protected by Crown copyright.

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Outcomes

Historical Concepts

A student:

The following historical concepts are integrated into the lesson sequences:

HT5-1 explains and assesses the historical forces and factors that shaped the modern world
and Australia
HT5-3 explains and analyses the motives and actions of past individuals and groups in the
historical contexts that shaped the modern world and Australia
HT5-4 explains and analyses the causes and effects of events and developments in the
modern world and Australia
HT5-5 identifies and evaluates the usefulness of sources in the historical inquiry process
HT5-7 explains different contexts, perspectives and interpretations of the modern world and
Australia
HT5-9 applies a range of relevant historical terms and concepts when communicating an
understanding of the past
HT5-10 selects and uses appropriate oral, written, visual and digital forms to communicate
effectively about the past for different audiences

Continuity and change: music, art and other forms of popular culture changed dramatically
after WWII, driven by a youth culture and changes in technology and political involvement.
Cause and effect: there were several domestic and international influences on the changes
which occurred in Australia, as well as changes within Australia that had international impact.
Perspectives: different groups in Australian society affected (and were affected by) the
changes which occurred since 1945. There was debate and conflict over how and why these
changes occurred.
Empathetic understanding: the themes and issues present in the pop culture of the post-war
period offer insights into the ideas, emotions and experiences of the people at the time.
Significance: some of the popular culture icons and movements of this period had significant
impact on political, economic and social lives of people in Australia and the world.
Contestability: there is argument over whether pop culture had a significant impact on society,
which nations/groups/individuals had most impact in Australia and whether pop culture can be
a valid form of historical evidence or study.

Related Life Skills outcomes: HTLS-3, HTLS-4, HTLS-5, HTLS-6, HTLS-7, HTLS-9, HTLS-11,
HTLS-12, HTLS-13

Key Historical Terms & Concepts (Glossary)

Site Study

Significance

Powerhouse Museum

Contribution

Australian Museum exhibits & others (virtual)

Popular Culture v High Culture

Centre for the Moving Image, Federation Square, Vic. (links to Civics & Citizenship with
Exhibition Hall etc)

Communication technology
Hype

This unit of work was written by Matthew Esterman, St. Scholasticas College, Glebe. Copyright of the unit of work is owned by AISNSW.
NSW syllabus content prepared by the Board of Studies, Teaching and Educational Standards NSW for and on behalf of the State of New South Wales is protected by Crown copyright.

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Resources
Books

Arrow, M., Friday on Our Minds: popular culture in Australia since 1945, 2009

Websites

For more ideas on activities, lessons and tasks, go to http://www.achistoryunits.edu.au/unit-program/y10-overview-v3-1.html

Activities, lessons and more http://www.tesaustralia.com/teaching-resource/Yr-10-History-Resources-Post-War-Australia-and-amp-Exam-7010086/

Australian Cartoon Museum Pop culture 1945-present http://theaustraliancartoonmuseum.com.au/projects/pop-culture-1945-present /

The People History (list of events by year) - http://www.thepeoplehistory.com/1945.html

DFAT website on People, Culture and Lifestyle since 1945 https://www.dfat.gov.au/facts/people_culture.html

Skwirk [watch this website for plagiarism in this topic and others] http://www.skwirk.com/p-c_s-14_u-189_t-506_c-1875/american-and-british-cultural-influence-1950s/nsw/american-andbritish-cultural-influence-1950s/australia-s-social-and-cultural-history-in-the-post-war-period/social-and-cultural-features-of-the-1950s

Assessment overview

Assessment for learning

Reflective response: To what extent did life change in


Australia during WWII?

Investigation into sportsmen and women develop a


persuasive speech

Depth Study 5A

Semester 1

Popular Culture

Term 2 , Week 1

Assessment as learning

Assessment of learning

Beatlemania research students will reflect on the


research process and be able to explain how they
approached it

Interviewing parents about favourite bands (students need


to evaluate own questions)

Finding sources on different bands from different decades


peer assessment of each others sources

Film analysis

Weighting: 30%
Description of Task: Students plan and present a group
music video or short documentary which reflects a significant
individual or group.
Outcomes: HT5-4, HT5-6, HT5-7, HT5-9, HT5-10

This unit of work was written by Matthew Esterman, St. Scholasticas College, Glebe. Copyright of the unit of work is owned by AISNSW.
NSW syllabus content prepared by the Board of Studies, Teaching and Educational Standards NSW for and on behalf of the State of New South Wales is protected by Crown copyright.

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Content

Teaching and learning strategies

Other Resources

including opportunities for extension activities, adjustments and assessment tasks


Overview (about 45 minutes)

The end of World War II


a. Class discussion and group brainstorm recalling knowledge of World War II and its end. Focus on
what changed, especially in terms of women and shift from British to American support. This could be
expressed as a mindmap (bubbl.us, mindmeister) or collaborative document (butchers paper, Google
Doc, etc).

This task has been


adapted to incorporate
the use of ICT. Please
see Activity 1 in the
report.

b. Students write a reflective response about what changes occurred during WWII using the brainstorm.
Sample question: To what extent did life change in Australia during World War Two?

In each lesson (beginning and/or end), students should be exposed to a different form of music (artists,
bands, genres) which were considered the most popular. Teachers should select songs that are
appropriate to what is under investigation.
Nature of Popular Culture in Australia
after 1945

Key question to think about: What are the key features of popular culture? What did pop
culture look like in the 1950s?

Students:

identify the main features of Australian


popular culture at the end of World War
II, including music, film, fashion and
sport

Students source a definition of popular culture and discuss the difference between popular culture
and other types of cultural activities/movements such as high culture, leisure time. Teacher could
incorporate the word zeitgeist (the spirit of the times) and suggest that pop culture is any work,
movement or person that exemplifies the zeitgeist of a particular year or decade. Discuss the role of
economic prosperity and a flourishing culture.
Teacher-led presentation of mindmap on four key areas of popular culture: a) music, b) film, c)
fashion, and d) sport examples could be provided from pre-WWII Australia e.g. Phar Lap for sport.
Students could either research these areas and focus on decades or this could be filled in as the unit
progresses.
Case study: Beatlemania Students investigate why Beatlemania occurred in Australia in the 1960s
and what this shows us about popular culture.
Students might compare/contrast to another case of a hyper-popular artist or band from the last
decade.

Mindmapping bubbl.us
VisuWords useful for definition of
popular, culture etc.
Australia in the 1950s stock footage
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AEXT
k8TYHZA

This task has been


adapted to
incorporate more use
of ICT, specifically,
the use of Fakebook.
Please see Activity 2
in the report.

YouTube newsreel from 1964 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wPr2QrgJaXg How did the


Beatles affect fashion and other aspects of culture? Do other artists do this?
Developments in popular culture

Key question to think about: How was Australia affected by British and American pop culture in

ABC Splash www.splash.abc.net.au

This unit of work was written by Matthew Esterman, St. Scholasticas College, Glebe. Copyright of the unit of work is owned by AISNSW.
NSW syllabus content prepared by the Board of Studies, Teaching and Educational Standards NSW for and on behalf of the State of New South Wales is protected by Crown copyright.

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Content

Teaching and learning strategies

Other Resources

including opportunities for extension activities, adjustments and assessment tasks


Students:

explain ways in which Australia in the


1950s was influenced by American
culture

assess the way American and British


music influenced post-war Australian

the post-war era? Is this still apparent today?

The old Australian record industry questions and thinking from Things to think about
http://splash.abc.net.au/media/-/m/521155/vinyl-the-australian-record-industry-1963

Students find evidence of the music charts from the 1950s and identify the following features:
American bands/artists, British bands/artists, Australian bands/artists. They could then compare and
contrast different years and explain if there is a trend, or not, towards particular groups in terms of
popularity at this time.

use a range of sources to explain the


nature and impact of television on

Students could watch documentaries (clips) from such series as Long Way To The Top (ABC) which
charts the history of Australian music & in particular rock n roll.

Australian popular culture

Students should interview their parents about what kind of bands/musicians they listened to growing
up. Compare/contrast different parents favourite bands in terms of genre, etc. Could also
compare/contrast to the types of music now being produced and compare for quality, originality etc.
This activity will also require them to 1) formulate questions and 2) use sound research methods for
analysing these responses, which can be applied to other tasks. (clear literacy links here)

entertainment, such as rock 'n' roll

(3 lessons)

How to conduct an interview


http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/less
on-plan/how-conduct-interview

Other examples of pop culture:


Hippy Culture - http://www.tesaustralia.com/teaching-resource/Hippy-Badges-Teaching-Aid-for-andquot-Hippy-Culture-and-quot-7010448/
The Stomp a 1960s dance craze questions and thinking from Things to think about
http://splash.abc.net.au/media/-/m/522277/the-stomp-a-1960s-dance-craze
Class debate: That the Rolling Stones were the greatest band of the post-war period. (to be precursor
to class debate or persuasive writing task towards the end of unit)
Changing nature of popular culture &
overseas influences

Focus on film (clear links to English)

Students will investigate the way in which films changed over time thanks to advances in technology.
It would be most effective to choose a genre such as science-fiction or action in order to most easily
identify the advances in, for example, computer-generated imagery (CGI).

Students could view a series of films and create critical reviews of the films for technical
achievement (using Oscar nominations and winners from 1945-2010 would be useful). This could be
done as a website or blog or as a written or spoken task.

Students:

describe how advances in


communication technology changed at
least ONE of the following during the
post-war period in Australia: music, film
or television

This unit of work was written by Matthew Esterman, St. Scholasticas College, Glebe. Copyright of the unit of work is owned by AISNSW.
NSW syllabus content prepared by the Board of Studies, Teaching and Educational Standards NSW for and on behalf of the State of New South Wales is protected by Crown copyright.

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Content

Teaching and learning strategies

Other Resources

including opportunities for extension activities, adjustments and assessment tasks

discuss how overseas influences have


affected ONE aspect of Australian

Students might like to focus on a sub-genre such as childrens animated films such as the
progression from the classic Disney movies through to Pixar animations such as Toy Story and Up!.
This could easily be linked to studies of other nations animated films such as manga or anime in
Asia.

Star Wars: Students could compare/contrast the CGI used in the Star Wars films of the 1970s/1980s
to the Episodes produced in 2000s. Could also link to influence of Australian sci-fi e.g. Matrix, (also
later Star Wars episodes were filmed in Australia)

Many film DVDs have behind the scenes or the making of type documentaries in the Extras area.
One of these could form the basis of a class discussion or framework for analysing another film.

Alternative: students could find trailers of famous/award-winning film from the post-war period and
compare/contrast the audiences for which the film was targeted.

popular culture
(3 lessons)

Australia's contribution to international


popular culture

Key question to think about: how successful has Australia been on the international stage? How
do we judge this success?

Students:

Class discussion & teacher example: Draw on learning from the Between the Wars (Australians at
War unit) and discuss role of Don Bradman during the Great Depression as symbol of popular
culture. http://sportinghistory.com.au/sir-donald-bradman/

Investigation: Students are to find (or be given) a list of Australian sportsmen and sportswomen.
They are to adopt one of these figures and assess their significance on the following features (or a
list of their own choosing) in a table form:

assess the contribution of Australian


men and women to international
sport, eg Olympic Games and Test
Cricket

using a range of sources, investigate


and assess the contribution of
Australian men and women to
international music, film and
television

(3 lessons)

Their contribution to their sport within Australia

Their success on an international stage e.g. Olympics/Commonwealth Games

Their recognition (officially and unofficially) e.g. medals, championships

Their contribution beyond the sport (e.g. within the community)

Students should focus on using a range of sources and providing an accurate bibliography the
Re:cite website might be useful here. http://www.lib.unimelb.edu.au/recite/

Assessment: Students could then write a persuasive speech to convince an audience as to why
their adopted sportsperson deserves to be placed in the Australian sports hall of fame. This speech
could be delivered orally (informal assessment task) in front of the class (or as a video) or written in
class, or could be a simply hand-in task.

This task has been


adapted to incorporate
the use of ICT as a
presentation tool for
students. Please see
Activity 3 in the report
and the Popular
Culture 1945-Now
webpage.

Australian Stories
http://australia.gov.au/aboutaustralia/australian-stories

Sporting History
http://sportinghistory.com.au/

This unit of work was written by Matthew Esterman, St. Scholasticas College, Glebe. Copyright of the unit of work is owned by AISNSW.
NSW syllabus content prepared by the Board of Studies, Teaching and Educational Standards NSW for and on behalf of the State of New South Wales is protected by Crown copyright.

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Content

Teaching and learning strategies

Other Resources

including opportunities for extension activities, adjustments and assessment tasks


Continuity and change in beliefs and
values that have influenced Australia

Key question to think about: How much of Australian culture has been influenced by the USA
and other global events?

Students:

This could be an informal assessment task, requiring students to gather their understandings from
the unit and write, speak or otherwise present their views on at least four clear examples of
Americanisation and/or globalisation. This will link to Geography in that they may start with an easy
example such as McDonalds (also discussing the impact of this on the health/food/culture of
Australia).

discuss the nature of Australian


popular culture today and the legacy of

Ask students to brainstorm other international events which have had an impact on Australia (prompt
with events such as 9/11, Olympics, environmental issues, conflicts, agreements/trade).

past influences

Students then choose four from the list or four they have developed themselves.

FINAL QUESTION: Has Australian popular culture changed since 1945 or is it essentially the
same?

outline and assess the impact of


Americanisation and global events on
Australian society over time

(3 lessons)

These materials have been developed by the AIS through funding provided by the NSW Government to support new syllabus implementation. Copyright is owned by AISNSW.
Except as set out below or permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced, stored or communicated without the approval of AISNSW.
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a)

The institution does not sell, hire or otherwise derive revenue from such reproduction, storage or communication

b)

The copyright of AISNSW is noted on any part which is copied or noted

If any other licence is sought, inquiries should be directed to the Executive Director of AISNSW.

This unit of work was written by Matthew Esterman, St. Scholasticas College, Glebe. Copyright of the unit of work is owned by AISNSW.
NSW syllabus content prepared by the Board of Studies, Teaching and Educational Standards NSW for and on behalf of the State of New South Wales is protected by Crown copyright.

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EVALUATION
What aspects of this unit worked well?

What aspects of this unit need improvement?

What other resources did you use?

Was the assessment appropriate to the unit?

What aspects of assessment need improvement?

Any additional comments?

Teacher:

Signature:

Date:

This unit of work was written by Matthew Esterman, St. Scholasticas College, Glebe. Copyright of the unit of work is owned by AISNSW.
NSW syllabus content prepared by the Board of Studies, Teaching and Educational Standards NSW for and on behalf of the State of New South Wales is protected by Crown copyright.

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