Family Life in Geelong
Year of production - 1966
Duration - 1min 32sec
Tags - family life, gender, identity, stereotypes, see all tags
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Reading standard: Students read, view, analyse, critique, reflect on and discuss contemporary and classical imaginative texts that explore personal, social, cultural and political issues of significance in their own lives.
Writing standard: Students write sustained and cohesive narratives that experiment with different techniques and show attention to chronology, characterization, consistent point of view and development of resolution.
They select subject matter and begin to use a range of language techniques to try to position readers to accept particular views of people, characters, events, ideas and information. They compose a range of other texts, such as feature articles, webpages and workplace texts. They plan and deliver presentations, sequencing and organizing complex ideas.
Speaking and listening standard: When engaged in discussion, they compare ideas, build on others’ ideas, provide and justify other points of view, and reach conclusions that take into account aspects of an issue.
The activities in this learning module are relevant to the Interdisciplinary Learning strand of Level 6 Communications (Listening, viewing and responding standard; Presenting standard) and Thinking Processes (Reasoning, processing and inquiry standard; Creativity standard).
The activities are also relevant to the Physical, Personal and Social Learning strand of Level 6 Interpersonal Development (Building social relationships standard; Working in teams standard) and Personal Learning (The individual learner standard; Managing personal learning standard).
This material is an extract. Teachers and Students should consult the Victoria Curriculum and Assessment Authority website for more information.Australia has long been one of the most highly urbanised nations in the world.
Part of this urbanisation is the existence of major rural centres.
Geelong is Victoria’s second largest city. Located about an hour’s drive from Melbourne, it is a major port, and features a large manufacturing centre for the automotive industry as well as a major oil refinery and storage area.
In the 1960s it was also a major textiles manufacturing area, though this industry has now declined significantly.
Geelong has always been one of the areas that state and federal governments focus on when they promote regional development away from the capital city, Melbourne.
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- Look at each of the scenes presented. List what happens in each of the five different scenes listed below. You may change titles of scenes if you wish.
* In the kitchen
* Children off to school
* Baby and girl
* Boy, boat and dad
* At the dinner table - Describe the roles that we see each gender carrying out in the video clip. Does the video clip present a clear division of gender roles or are there areas where both genders have the same role?
- Look at each of the scenes presented. List what happens in each of the five different scenes listed below. You may change titles of scenes if you wish.
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- Consider your own family, or a family known to you and note the roles each person plays. Compare these results to the video clip and discuss the differences.
- The video clip uses stereotypes (people or things considered to represent a set type or group) to construct its message. Describe the stereotypes that are shown for:
* The man/husband/father
* The woman/wife/mother
* The boy/son/brother
* The girl/daughter/sister. - Debate the topic ‘stereotyping can have a harmful effect on people and on our society’.
- The video clip was made in the 1960s to encourage people to live in Geelong.
- Write a 500-word voice-over script to suit the above stated purpose and likely audience of the video clip.
- Imagine you are a filmmaker making a modern 90second film about modern family life in the city (or country) for your class.
* Decide the message about family that you want to convey.
* List and describe the five scenes you would shoot for your film.
* Write a 500-word voice-over script and include a list of the music titles you would include.
* Present written work to the class.
Television Program
Kay Pavlou (director), Under One Roof, Film Australia & SBS, 1993


