Scenario
You are part of a teaching team in an early childhood setting working with three-to-four-year-old children. Recently, you have been reading and discussing the following books with the children, who have shown a strong interest in Australian animals:
- Somewhere in Australia by Marcello Pennacchio
- Wombat Stew by Marcia K. Vaughan
- An ABC of Australian Animals by Bronwyn Bancroft
In response to this interest, the teaching team has decided to initiate a project investigation on Australian animals to support and extend children’s literacy and numeracy development.
Mind Map
Using insights from:
- The chosen children’s literature
- Your excursion to a local venue (e.g., Melbourne Museum) where children can encounter Australian land, sea, and air animals
- Your own research
Create a mind map that highlights potential learning opportunities across curriculum areas to support children’s:
- Knowledge development
- Critical thinking skills (with reflective components)
- Disposition for inquiry and exploration
- Literacy, numeracy, and overall wellbeing
Your mind map must clearly show connections between Australian animals and opportunities for integrated learning.
Learning Experience
Design a three-week integrated literacy and numeracy curriculum, including the following curriculum areas:
Curriculum Areas
- Art
- Drama and Puppetry
- Movement and Music
- Language
- Mathematics
- Science
- Engineering
- Humanities and Social Sciences
- Integrated Curriculum (e.g., STEM or STEAM)
Requirements
For each curriculum area, you must:
- Design one original learning experience that supports literacy and numeracy development for 3–4-year-old children.
- Clearly describe:
- What the children will do
- What the educators will do
- Make use of:
- Indoor learning environments
- Outdoor learning environments
- Local community spaces (incursions and excursions)
- Identify relevant:
- Resources and materials
- Digital technologies/media
- Clearly link every learning experience to:
- EYLF Outcomes
- Stages of the planning cycle (Observe → Plan → Implement → Evaluate → Reflect)
- Outline effective pedagogical practices and strategies that promote:
- Literacy-focused critical thinking
- Numeracy-focused critical thinking
Minute Puppet Show
Create a puppet show as a group using:
- The children’s literature
- Excursion insights
- Curriculum experiences from Phase 2
The puppet show must:
- Be suitable for 3–4-year-old children
- Be around 5 minutes in length
- Support literacy and numeracy development
- Include only:
- The story
- The full script
Ensure the story includes Australian animals and reflects the learning provocations explored throughout the project.
Brief summary of assessment requirements
You are part of an early-childhood teaching team (children aged 3–4) who will run a three-week integrated project on Australian animals to develop children’s literacy and numeracy. The assessment has three phases:
- Mind map : use children’s literature, an excursion (e.g., Melbourne Museum) and research to create a mind map showing learning opportunities across curriculum areas (knowledge, critical thinking, inquiry disposition, literacy, numeracy, wellbeing). Show connections between animals and integrated learning opportunities (land / sea / air).
- Three-week learning program : design one original learning experience for each curriculum area (Art; Drama & Puppetry; Movement & Music; Language; Mathematics; Science; Engineering; HASS; Integrated STEM/STEAM). For each experience specify: what children do, what educators do, indoor/outdoor/incursion use, resources & digital/media, links to EYLF outcomes, and the planning cycle stages (Observe → Plan → Implement → Evaluate → Reflect). Emphasise pedagogical strategies that promote literacy- and numeracy-focused critical thinking.
- 5-minute puppet show (script + story) : a group puppet show (story + full script only) that uses the literature, excursion insights and designed experiences; suitable for 3–4-year-olds and supports literacy & numeracy.
Assessment length / weight & due date (as provided): 2,800 words, 30% weighting, due Sunday 11:59 PM (AEST).