Lighthouse Keepers and Their Families
Year of production - 1949
Duration - 2min 16sec
Tags - gender, remote areas, technological change, see all tags
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This digital resource can be used to achieve the following outcomes:
A student
4.2 uses a range of processes for responding to and composing texts
4.5 makes informed language choices to shape meaning with accuracy, clarity and coherence
4.7 thinks critically and interpretively about information, ideas and arguments to respond to and compose texts
4.9 demonstrates understanding that texts express views of their broadening world and their relationships within it
Lighthouses are essential for the safety of ships. Each has its own special sequence of flashing, and this tells navigators where they are located. They are always placed on land, and warn of the presence of rocks and land that need to be avoided in an area. This lighthouse is situated on Maatsuyker Island below Tasmania. For many years three lighthouse keepers and their families lived on this island. It is an isolated location where food and supplies were brought in every few months by boat. It is a challenging environment where the weather is changeable, often with very cold winds. Despite these challenges, these lighthouse keepers never failed to keep the lights ablaze. It might be a lonely occupation but for certain people, they enjoy the lifestyle in a remote place like Maatsuyker Island. There is also something beautiful about lighthouses. Today, however, with changes in technology which automate lighthouses, lighthouse keepers have become part of a bygone era.
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- Describe the setting of the lighthouse.
- Describe the jobs that need to be done to keep the light working and visible.
- The video clip tells us that three families live at the lighthouse. Give reasons why those families might choose to live there.
- List five advantages and five disadvantages of living this way.
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- Write brief descriptions of the roles of the men and the women in the video clip.
- Give reasons why you think men and women had such separate roles at that time.
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- Imagine you are one of the children living at the lighthouse. Write a 300-word letter to your cousin describing your life on the day before the supply ship is expected.
- Write a micro mystery story (300–500 words) set in a lighthouse many years ago. You could begin with something strange being washed up on the shore.
Literacy Activity: Focus= Viewing / Analysing
- The clip begins with slow, serious music, images of cliffs and rocks and a series of facts presented by the commentator. Explain the purpose of this introduction? (3 marks)
- Why must everything be exact? (1 mark)
- What important job do women have on the island? (1 mark)
Television Program
Esben Storm (dir), Round the Twist, Australian Childrens Television Foundation & ABC, 1989


