NATIONAL TALK BLACK – 09/10/2024

NATIONAL TALK BLACK – 09/10/2024

On todays National Talk Black via NIRS – National Indigenous Radio Service we have:

Karalee Blake, Savannah Hughes-D’Aeth, Robert Dalgetty and Xavier Riley, Dianella Secondary College Teacher and Year7/8 Students, talking about Dianella Secondary College’s bush tucker workshops full of friendships and culture. These students are taking part in the unique Dookerniny Garbala cooking class, learning how to harness traditional ingredients and bush tucker to make meals with a twist. Many of the ingredients were planted and harvested by the students in the school’s garden. The workshops typically run for an hour after school, where students from years 7 to 12 take part. The school said the program’s goals included closing educational and health gaps for students and their families, as well as encouraging regular school attendance. The workshops, which have been in place for three years, are run by the school’s Elder in Residence Lesley Lee and Aboriginal Education Coordinator Karalee Blake, who are both women originally from Wiilman country in Lake Grace, about 345 kilometres south-east of Perth. In recent years, the program has expanded to include students from diverse cultural backgrounds who are interested in Aboriginal culture.

https://www.dsc.wa.edu.au/aboriginal-education.html

Darcie Carruthers, Australian Conservation Foundation (ACF) Nature Campaigner, talking about the hundreds who rallyed in Sydney as new research reveals imminent threat on 10 Australian species. It’s a shocking fact – Australia is a world leader in mammal extinctions. The Australian Conservation Foundation has consulted a range of ecologists and biologists and identified 10 species that are among the most imperilled in the country. Among the 10 species identified as at serious risk of extinction are Tasmania’s Maugean skate, the Swift parrot, the Regent honeyeater, a small wallaby called the Top End Nabarlek, the Baw Baw frog, Victoria’s grassland earless dragon, the Central rock-rat, the Kangaroo Island assassin spider and two plants, the Tunbridge leek-orchid and the Coffs Harbour fontainea. The release of this new research coincides with the March for Nature in Sydney where hundreds of people are taking to the streets to send a message to the Albanese government: No Nature, No Future.

https://www.acf.org.au

Lachlan Clark, Director of the Southern Region at the Office of Sport, talking about the South East mob taking first steps to a career in surfing. First Nations surfers from the South East took the first steps to becoming accredited surf coaches at Pambula Beach today. In partnership with the NSW Office of Sport and Surfing with the Mob, Surfing NSW delivered the training to 10 local First Nations surfers, providing them with the skills and knowledge to become accredited surf coaches. Participants included a mix of adults and students, with the adults completing the Foundation Surf Coaching Course while the students undertook the Surf Coach Essentials Course. As part of the Program all participants completed a fitness test comprising a run, swim, run, paddle and run as well as a 200m swim that they were required to finish in less than five minutes. The Program also included participants learning first aid and surf rescue training. To support Surfing with the Mob to deliver future programs to First Nations surfers in the region, the Office of Sport provided a number of new surfboards, wetsuits and a Surfing with the Mob branded trailer.

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