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Ten years of the HSIE K-6 Syllabus

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Title: Ten years of the HSIE K-6 Syllabus


1
Ten years of the HSIE K-6 Syllabus Common HSIE
syllabus questions and answers.
Anne Southwell Senior Curriculum Adviser HSIE
K-6 Curriculum Directorate
NSW Department of Education Training NSW
Public Schools Leading the Way
www.det.nsw.edu.au
2
Q.1
  • What do the letters HSIE stand for?

3
Answer to Q.1
  • Human Society and Its Environment, which is
    commonly known as SOSE - Studies of Society and
    Environment or Humanities in other states and
    territories.

4
Q.2
  • How many strands are there in HSIE K-6? List them.

5
Answer to Q.2
  • Four Change and Continuity, Cultures,
    Environments and Social Systems and Structures.
    Each strand is divided into two sub strands.
  • It is worth noting the Resource system sub strand
    in Social Systems and Structures is often a
    standalone strand in some other states.

6
Q.3
  • How many outcomes are there in each stage? 4, 6,
    8, 9, 13 or 15?

7
Answer to Q.3
  • Four HSIE outcomes in Early Stage 1
  • Eight outcomes in Stages 1, 2 and 3 i.e. the
    smallest number of outcomes for any Key Learning
    Area. This is why the outcomes are so complex. It
    could well have been easier for teachers to have
    more outcomes that were simpler and easier to
    understand.
  • Note SciTech has 9 outcomes, PDHPE has 13 and
    Creative Arts has 15.

8
Q.4
  • Must the topics in the HSIE Units of Work,
    developed by NSW BOS be taught? True or false.

9
Answer to Q.4
  • False this is stated in the 1999 BOS Principals
    Package, in the Overview the 28 units are not
    mandatory and also in the units of work the
    units of work at not mandatory page 5.

10
Q.5
  • What is mandatory? The syllabus, the outcomes,
    the indicators, the content?

11
Answer to Q.5
  • The whole syllabus is mandatory including the
    outcomes and the syllabus subject matter that
    unpacks and supports the outcomes. The wording
    Students in stage X will learn about at the top
    of pages 43, 49, 55 and 61 identifies the intent
    of this subject matter.
  • Skills and values and attitudes will be addressed
    if the syllabus subject matter is referenced
  • Indicators included in the syllabus are described
    as examples only (p.19).
  • Some teachers are incorrectly assuming that only
    the outcomes are mandatory and therefore they can
    choose to address content that is not described
    by the syllabus.

12
Q.6
  • HSIE does not have any skills, because there are
    no skills outcomes? True or false?

13
Answer to Q.6
  • False
  • HSIE has 3 distinct skills Acquiring
    Information, Using an Inquiry Process and Social
    and Civic Participation. These skills do not have
    outcomes. However it is impossible for students
    to learn about HSIE syllabus subject matter
    without engaging with these skills in a
    hierarchical manner through the stages. This is a
    good reason for referring to the syllabus subject
    matter when developing and undertaking teaching
    and learning programs.

14
Q.7
  • Which HSIE strand is the smallest?

15
Answer to Q.7
  • Environments this strand is about 25 smaller
    than the other 3 strands according to the
    syllabus subject matter listed, because learning
    about the Environment is also included in Science
    and Technology and PDHPE. However this strand
    receives the most support in the units of work
    particularly Stage 2. (Refer to the table
    diagrams on pages 42, 76 and 114 of the BOS units
    of work.)

16
Q.8
  • Which strand receives the smallest amount of
    teaching and learning in the BOS units of work?
    What are the implications of this for school
    planning?

17
Answer to Q.8
  • The Cultures strand If only the units of work
    are used in a school plan there is insufficient
    teaching of the Cultures strand in all stages.
  • Schools will need to source other topics or
    resources to fill the gaps DET Curriculum K-12
    Directorate has developed considerable support
    for the Cultures strand available at
    http//www.curriculumsupport.education.nsw.gov.au/
    primary/hsie/index.htm

18
Q.9
  • Should Stage 3 teachers teach about ancient
    civilisations?

19
Answer to Q.9
  • No.
  • No primary school should include ancient
    civilisations in their school plan for HSIE.
    There are no primary HSIE outcomes or syllabus
    subject matter that cover any aspect of an
    ancient civilisation such as Egypt, Greece, or
    Rome etc.
  • Ancient civilisations is the first major topic
    students will engage with in Stage 4 History
    Societies and civilisations of the past. Teaching
    about an ancient civilisation in primary schools
    has a negative effect on student engagement with
    HSIE in High School, in the same way that primary
    teachers deal with student disengagement when
    they encounter students in a class that have
    already been taught something they now need to
    cover.

20
Answer to Q.9 (cont)
  • Secondary teachers are not able to substitute a
    different topic, they have to teach about ancient
    civilisations. Secondary teachers are rightly
    complaining about the impact of ancient
    civilisations being taught in primary schools on
    their school planning and programming.
  • It is also impossible for primary teachers to
    assess and report upon something that is not in
    the syllabus because there is no syllabus
    standard by which to judge student achievement.
  • It also begs the questions Is this an
    unnecessary topic that is contributing to teacher
    workload? or What is being left out of the
    Stage 3 HSIE to make time for ancient
    civilisations?

21
Q.10
  • In which stage would you teach a topic on
    colonial exploration / inland explorers?

22
Answer to Q.10
  • There is no stage in which a topic on Colonial
    Exploration or Inland Explorers should be taught.
    In Stage 3 there is a brief mention of colonial
    exploration, but there is not sufficient syllabus
    subject matter to justify a standalone topic.

23
Q.11
  • Does HSIE need to be taught in Early Stage 1?

24
Answer to Q.11
  • Yes, because the Education Act (reflected in DET
    policy) states that all Key Learning Areas must
    be addressed in each year of schooling.
  • But, if all the Early Stage 1 aspects of HSIE are
    not covered then no lasting harm will ensure,
    especially when Early Stage 1 teachers (wonderful
    people ?) focus on developing student literacy,
    numeracy and socialisation skills, which often
    closely align to the HSIE syllabus subject
    matter.

25
Q.12
  • Is it a good idea to alternate the teaching of
    HSIE with SciTech?

26
Answer to Q.12
  • It is best practice to teach the HSIE K-6
    syllabus in each term. While the time allocated
    to HSIE teaching will be different in each
    school, about 90 minutes or about 10 of
    classroom time a week should be available to this
    Key Learning Area. This time is identified in the
    HSIE Principals Package and reflected in DET
    policy. This may overlap with literacy and
    numeracy at times.

27
Q.13
  • Is HSIE best taught in an integrated way with
    SciTech?

28
Answer to Q.13
  • There are only 3 HSIE outcomes where some Science
    and Technology logically integrates these are
    the two Environments outcomes and the Resource
    Systems outcome in Social Systems and Structures.
  • In these 2 areas there is some overlap with
    Science and Technology however there is still
    specific HSIE syllabus subject matter that will
    need to be taught in these 2 areas that does not
    integrate. Refer to the syllabus subject matter
    in these 2 strands for clarification.

29
Q.14
  • How is it best to teach about Aboriginal history
    and culture within other topics or stand alone?

30
Answer to Q.14
  • Teaching Aboriginal history and culture is not
    optional. All schools need to consider where they
    are teaching about Aboriginal history and
    culture.
  • Ideally Aboriginal history and culture is best
    taught interwoven through all topics and strands
    (where it logically fits of course) e.g. a Stage
    3 topic on China for example would not include
    any specific Aboriginal culture. But some
    teaching and learning is better than nothing at
    all if there are some teachers who feel that
    they can cope with this best in a standalone unit
    then so be it.
  • Refer to the Shared History web site for detailed
    teaching and learning support
    http//www.curriculumsupport.education.nsw.gov.au/
    shared/index.htm

31
Q.15
  • How long should teaching of the discovery of
    Australia and British colonisation take in Stage
    2?

32
Answer to Q.15
  • British colonisation needs to be scheduled for
    one term to allow the rest of the Stage 2
    syllabus to be taught, but this will be a big
    term of HSIE and its location needs to be
    managed.
  • The discovery of Australia has only a brief
    mention in Stage 2 and does not justify an
    additional terms worth of work, a couple of
    lessons would be considered sufficient. It is
    worth noting that learning about Aboriginal and
    Indigenous Peoples, Colonisation and Contact
    History is also a mandatory part of Stage 4
    History usually covered in Year 8.
  • This may be one term where no Science and
    Technology is taught balanced against a term
    where Science and Technology has a major focus.

33
Q.16
  • Are local, State and Federal Governments taught
    in Stage 3?

34
Answer to Q.16
  • Local government is actually taught in Stage 2
    Social systems and structures SSS2.8, because
    Local government deals with the environment in
    the local area it is also possible to look at
    some aspects of the Environments strand when
    learning about local government.
  • State and Federal Government are part of Stage 3,
    and should be addressed together. It is not
    appropriate to spend a term in one year on State
    government and then another term in the next year
    on Federal government.

35
Q.17
  • Is teaching about Gold in Stage 3 the best way
    cover aspects of Change and continuity ? What
    other units of work are in the school plan to
    teach this strand?

36
Answer to Q.17
  • No Gold is a very small component of Stage 3
    Change and Continuity.
  • The topic Gold becomes the focus rather than
    the covering the syllabus subject matter in the
    strand
  • Only teaching about Gold usually leaves out a
    large component of early Australia history,
    particularly about other significant events and
    people related to colonial Australia prior to
    Federation in 1901. Refer to the subject matter /
    content on page 61.
  • Australian Democracy is often another unit of
    work.

37
Q.18
  • Is General Religious education (GRE) an optional
    part of the syllabus?

38
Answer to Q.18
  • GRE is not optional to teach
  • Some parents (rarely) can ask that their
    child(ren) do not participate in these lessons.
    This does not mean that all students in the class
    are then denied this learning.
  • GRE is part of the Cultures strand in particular,
    although some aspects may be part of other
    strands in a small way. Teachers may need support
    to develop teaching and learning about the 5 main
    world religions in Stage 2.
  • Resources for all stages may need to be borrowed
    or purchased to support this teaching in all
    stages. Schools may borrow suitable resources
    from the DET Henry Parkes Equity Resource Centre
    (mail out available).
  • Resources to support this teaching and learning
    are available at
  • http//www.curriculumsupport.education.nsw.gov.au/
    primary/hsie/resources/index.htm

39
Q.19
  • If a school decides not to use COGs then the only
    other support for HSIE is the BOS units of work?
    True or false?

40
Answer to Q.19
  • False
  • In the last 10 years a great deal of syllabus
    support has been developed for HSIE by NSW DET,
    however this has often been overlooked by
    teachers because the names of the support
    material does not have the same topic name as
    those in the units of work.
  • Resources include published materials that have
    been distributed to schools over the years and
    also units of work that can only be downloaded
    e.g. units for multistage classes.

41
Q.20
  • What secondary subject(s) does HSIE lead into?
    Mandatory and elective?

42
Answer to Q.20
  • History and Geography are both mandatory in
    Stages 4 and 5 in High School. All students in
    Year 10 sit a School Certificate exam in
    Australian History, Geography, Civics and
    Citizenship.
  • There are 3 Stage 5 HSIE electives Aboriginal
    Studies, Work Education (both small number of
    students) and Commerce (more than 25 of all
    students).

43
Answer to Q.20 (cont)
  • This means that there is limited flow through of
    the primary Cultures strand into Stages 4 and 5.
    Specific study of different cultures is limited
    to HSIE International Studies, a School developed
    Board Endorsed Course undertaken by a handful of
    classes in NSW.
  • Stage 6 HSIE has a wide range of electives such
    as Modern and Ancient History, Geography, Society
    and Culture, Legal Studies and Business Studies,
    the most widely taken course after English (the
    only HSC compulsory subject) and Mathematics.

44
HSIE 10 years on
  • The HSIE K-6 syllabus is standing the test of
    time very well.
  • There are some minor adjustments that can be
    identified to ensure currency at this point in
    time.

45
Considerations include
  • Updating HSIE teaching and learning programs to
  • Annotate the syllabus subject matter for each
    stage, this will identify where teaching about a
    topic has moved into another stage (higher or
    lower) or to another KLA completely all factors
    that contribute to teacher workload
  • Engage with the range of specific HSIE support
    material that has been developed over the last 10
    years to support classroom teachers
  • Include teaching about Cultures where both
    Australian identities and cultural diversity area
    addressed for all students, where cultural
    diversity is considered in the context of unity
    with diversity
  • Consideration is given to reducing the depth and
    breadth of content on British colonisation in
    Stage 2 knowing it is taught again in Stage 4.

46
Considerations (cont.)
  • Reduce or even eliminate the use of global
    contexts in Stage 3 when global contexts are
    covered in Stage 4 Geography e.g. using a case
    study of an Australian rainforest instead of
    looking at global examples of rainforests global
    responsibilities Antarctica.
  • Remove the global focus from the Resource Systems
    outcome in Stage 3 (SSS3.7) while retaining
    learning about Australian resources and wider
    community responsibilities
  • Include practical hands on activities for
    students in all stages with historical artefacts
    and engagement with historical situations so
    that students understand change over time and the
    impact different technology had on the way people
    lived that is now so different to the way people
    live now e.g. using excursions, visits to
    historical sites, museums, role plays to make the
    teaching of history easier for teachers and
    students.

47
Thank you
  • For additional support or information contact
  • Anne Southwell, Senior Curriculum Adviser HSIE
    K-12 at Curriculum K-12 Directorate (02) 9886
    7156 anne.southwell_at_det.nsw.edu.au
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