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Read More“Reading is Magic”. This is the gorgeous theme for this years Children’s Book Week, and we at Riley Callie Resources couldn’t agree more!
Read MoreNature Play Week 2024 has arrived! What a beautiful platform this week provides for the inclusion of First Nations perspectives. Nature Play Week celebrates initiatives of all shapes and sizes that reconnect children with nature and the outdoors. It’s links perfectly to Connecting and Caring to Country!
Read MoreThe end of 2023 is here! This makes it the perfect time for us to look back at all the great new releases that have come out this year! Here are our top 5 First Nations authored and/or illustrated titles for 2023!
Read MoreThanks to the amazing Miss Gibbs, we have this beautiful Christmas bunting available for you to download, print, and hang in your classroom for these final few weeks of Term 4!
Read MoreChristmas time is a wonderful opportunity to step away from the crowded shopping centres, and make conscious choices to shop small with your gift-giving. We are setting ourselves a challenge this year to shop at 5 small Indigenous businesses for our Christmas gifting!
Read MoreThis Indigenous Business Month, how are you using your buying power to support the Indigenous business sector?
Read MoreDuring Bird Week, thousands of people from across the country head out into their backyards, local parks or favourite open spaces to take part in the annual Aussie Bird Count.
Read MoreLearn how Yarning Circles are useful in the educational setting.
Read MoreIn today’s blog, we share our top resources for sharing First Nations perspectives this Father’s Day, both in the classroom or at home; with a focus on books which explore male role models, plus don’t forget to check out our downloadable Father’s Day card!
Read MoreIn 1988, the first National Aboriginal and Islander Children’s Day was established on 4 August and was set against the backdrop of protests led by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and their supporters during the bicentennial year.
Read MoreThis year’s NAIDOC theme is “For Our Elders”. In this blog we highlight 10 resources that correspond with this theme.
Read MoreReconciliation Australia CEO Karen Mundine calls on all Australians to tackle the unfinished business of reconciliation with the new NRW 2023 theme, 'Be a Voice for Generations.’
Read MoreKinship is a central part of Aboriginal society; it is a system of social organisation which position’s people’s relationships, responsibilities, roles and reciprocal obligations to one another. Kinship determines how people are related to each other, and how they can interact.
Read MoreAboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have been studying the stars for many, many thousands of years and have formed understandings of the skies in different ways to Western astronomical systems of thinking.
Read MoreAs educators and teachers, it is critical to understand the context from which educational disadvantage impacts on First Nations children and students.
Read MoreMaking fire by friction is an ancient practice and has been employed in a variety of ways in Aboriginal culture.
Read More‘Songlines’ (also called ‘Dreaming Tracks’) are an important mode for transmitting cultural information. Songlines are an oral tradition deeply tied to the landscape; a type of ‘memory code’, where each song is a part of a larger story, and each songline can traverse hundreds of kilometres.
Read MoreMusic is a great way to share Indigenous perspectives in your classroom!
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