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Planning

Accreditation period Units 14: 20242028

Introduction

The VCE Outdoor and Environmental Studies Study Design 2024–2028 Support materials provides teaching and learning advice for Units 1 to 4 or Units 3 and 4 and assessment advice for school-based assessment in Units 3 and 4.

The program developed and delivered to students must be in accordance with the VCE Outdoor and Environmental Studies Study Design 2024–2028.

 

Developing a program

The program outlines the nature and sequence of teaching and learning necessary for students to demonstrate achievement of the outcomes for a unit. The areas of study describe the specific knowledge and skills required to demonstrate a specific outcome. Teachers are required to develop a program for their students that includes appropriate learning activities that enable students to develop the knowledge and skills identified in the outcomes in each unit.

This study examines outdoor environments from a breadth of perspectives and is underpinned by cross-study specifications of Indigenous Australians’ knowledge, culture, history, environmental citizenship and sustainability.

Teachers are encouraged to include Indigenous Australians’ knowledge and perspectives in the design and delivery of teaching and learning programs and wherever possible plan for Indigenous voice to be accessed as best practice to deliver this respectful learning.

Sustainability is presented throughout this study as a complex, holistic concept with environmental, social and economic dimensions. Opportunities exist for inclusion of sustainability as a concept through specific key knowledge and selected case studies across the entirety of the study design.

Teachers should aim to facilitate learning and inquiry by developing programs that enable students to apply and demonstrate key knowledge to visited or studied outdoor environments.

Attention should be given to developing a program that is relevant to students, is contextually based, employs a variety of manageable tasks and uses a variety of source material from a diverse number of providers.

Outdoor experiences

Area of Study 3 in Units 1, 2 and 4 is designed for students to apply their learning through outdoor experiences.

A wide range of outdoor environments can be studied, ranging from those that have experienced minimal human influence, through to those that have undergone significant human intervention. To address the key knowledge and key skills in Units 3 and 4, it will be necessary to choose locations that have been subject to human intervention. Students of VCE Outdoor and Environmental Studies develop the knowledge, skills and understanding required to analyse and contribute toward the health of outdoor environments, preparing them for future opportunities as stewards of outdoor environments. It is these outdoor experiences that provide opportunities for them to best observe practices that care for or damage outdoor environments and thus build their knowledge of what stewardship looks like.

Practical application of key knowledge is an important feature of the study. Learning activities must include:

  • practical activities that involve the visitation of at least two different environments
  • spending between 25 and 50 hours of each unit participating in outdoor experiences (not inclusive of time spent travelling or sleeping).

Logbooks are referenced in this study as the means for students to keep their records of practical activities and observations of key knowledge. The logbook is maintained and cited as a:

  • source of primary data
  • requirement for satisfactory completion of each unit, rather than being used as a specific assessment task.

Teachers must regularly sight and monitor the logbook, particularly for the investigative task in Area of Study 3 of Units 1 and 2 and Area of Study 3 of Unit 4.

Samples of possible experiences are suggested below.

Outdoor environmentOutdoor experienceDuration

Grampians National Park, Wilson Promontory National Park

Bushwalking and overnight camping

Multi day / journey experience

Alpine National Park

Cross country skiing, snow shoeing and overnight camping

Multi day / journey experience

Murray River

Canoeing and overnight camping

Multi day / journey experience

King River

White water exploring

Multi day or day excursion

Westernport Bay

Sea kayaking, surfing and snorkeling

Day excursion

Surf Coast

Surfing, rock pooling, beachcombing, Great Ocean Road investigation

Day or multi day

Werribee Gorge

Rock climbing, abseiling

Day excursion

You Yangs, Lysterfield, Warburton, Red Hill, Bendigo, Falls Creek, Mt Beauty, Bright

Mountain bike riding

Day excursion

School grounds, local park

Observing and monitoring environmental characteristics

Class time on school campus or nearby park

School grounds, local park

Observing scientific understanding of outdoor environments

Class time on school campus or nearby park

School grounds, local park

Observing a range of sustainability measures

Class time on school campus or nearby park


Unit 1 Planner

WeekKey knowledgeAssessment / Practical experience

1

  • Indigenous peoples’ and non-Indigenous peoples’ ways of knowing outdoor environments, including the meaning and use of terms such as Kinship, nature, Country, outdoor environments, private land, wilderness, managed parks, urban environments, built environments and outdoor experiences

Outdoor experiences and formative logbook recordings

2

  • features of biomes, including alpine, coastal, inland waterways, grassland, heathland, forest, marine and arid

3

  • safe and sustainable interactions with outdoor environments, involving minimum impact strategies for individuals, route planning, tent-site selection, fuel stove usage, navigation, packing a pack

4

  • equipment required to safely explore outdoor environments

5

  • the range of motivations for experiencing outdoor environments and responses to outdoor environments, such as fear and appreciation

 

6

  • the variety of ways in which Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples experience and understand outdoor environments:
    • through custodianship
    • as recreation
    • as a resource
    • as spiritual connection
    • as a study site

 

7

 

Area of Study 1 Assessment task – Case study

8

  • the influence of depictions of experiencing outdoor environments on personal responses, such as in the mainstream media, social media, music, art, writing and advertising

Outdoor experiences (including practical demonstration of key skills) and formative logbook recordings

9

  • factors that affect access to experiencing outdoor environments, including socioeconomic status, cultural background, age, gender and physical ability

10

  • basic first aid skills, including blister management, small wounds, snake bites, severe bleed treatment, Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and immobilisation techniques
  • risk management of outdoor experiences

11

 

Area of Study 3 Assessment task

12

  • relevant technologies and their influences on outdoor experiences

 

13

  • the variety of personal responses to risk when experiencing outdoor environments, including the interplay between competence, perceived risk and real risk

 

14

 

Area of Study 2 Assessment task – Visual presentation (This is placed here as content for Area of Study 3 has already been delivered, and thus assessed previous to Area of Study 2.)


Unit 2 Planner

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WeekKey knowledgeAssessment / Practical experience

1

  • scientific understandings of a range of outdoor environments including:
    • the interrelationships between biotic and abiotic components
    • the effects of natural and human-induced changes on a range of outdoor environments, such as day to night, seasons, tides, flood, drought, fire, migration, and climate change

Outdoor experiences and formative logbook recordings

2

  • Indigenous peoples’ land management understandings and perspectives of an outdoor environment

3

  • how to plan and adapt outdoor experiences due to weather, including weather patterns and extreme weather

4–5

  • how to conduct safe and sustainable peer-led outdoor activities, involving minimal impact strategies for groups, route planning, food and equipment planning, risk management planning and transport planning

6

  • understandings of vocational perspectives of outdoor environments, including at least two of the following:
    • natural resource management
    • nature-based tourism
    • outdoor leading and guiding
    • environmental research and policy
    • land management roles including Traditional Owner groups and National Indigenous Australians Agency programs
    • education
    • agriculture

7

Area of Study 1 Assessment task – Data analysis

8

  • impacts of conservation, economic and recreational activities on a range of outdoor environments

Outdoor experiences (including practical demonstration of key skills) and formative logbook recordings

9

  • the role of community-based environmental action to promote positive impacts of humans on outdoor environments

10

  • identification and management of threatened species and/or ecological communities in an outdoor environment

11

  • how to conduct safe and sustainable peer-led outdoor activities
  • how to monitor observations of own and other groups’ impacts on outdoor environment during outdoor experience

12

 

Area of Study 3 Assessment task

13

  • the impact of urbanisation on outdoor environments

 

14

  • direct and indirect impacts of technologies that support human interactions with outdoor environments, including:
    • equipment manufacture
    • transport
    • snow making
    • recreational vehicles

 

15

 

Area of Study 2 Assessment task – Written response


Unit 3 Planner

WeekKey knowledgeAssessment / Practical experience

1

  • Australian outdoor environments before humans arrived, including characteristics of biological isolation, geological stability, and climatic variations

Teachers select four key knowledge items across Units 3 and 4 and a minimum of two environments for outdoor experience to occur at the beginning of Unit 3 for students to begin their logbooks.

2

  • relationships with outdoor environments expressed by specific Indigenous peoples’ communities before and after European colonisation

Practical experiences 
Logbook entry of primary data
Logbook entry of secondary data summary

3

  • relationships of non-Indigenous peoples with specific outdoor environments as influenced by and observed in local or visited outdoor environments during historical time periods:
    • Early colonisation (1788–1859)

4

  • relationships of non-Indigenous peoples with specific outdoor environments as influenced by and observed in local or visited outdoor environments during historical time periods:
    • Pre-Federation (1860–1900)

5

  • relationships of non-Indigenous peoples with specific outdoor environments as influenced by and observed in local or visited outdoor environments, during historical time periods:
    • Post-Federation (1901–1990)

6

  • the beginnings of environmentalism and resulting influence on political party or policy, as observed in one of the following historical campaigns:
    • Lake Pedder
    • Franklin River
    • Little Desert

7

assessment

School-assessed Coursework for Outcome 1 (40 marks)

8

  • Indigenous peoples’ custodianship of outdoor environments including the formation of land and water councils

Practical experiences 
Logbook entry of primary data
Logbook entry of secondary data summary

9

  • conservation, recreation, and economic relationships with outdoor environments

10–12

  • methods used by individuals and groups to influence decisions about two conflicts over the use of outdoor environments, and the processes followed by land managers to resolve said conflicts, including at least one of the following:
    • feral species in the Alpine National Park
    • commercial logging in Victoria
    • establishment of new mountain bike parks
    • Southern Ocean Whale hunting
    • Murray Darling Basin water allocations

13–14

  • an environmental issue in Australia and related policy from two federal political parties or representatives, including at least one of the following:
    • Labor party
    • Liberal-National Coalition
    • The Greens
  • the influence of social debates on relationships with outdoor environments, including one of:
    • climate change
    • renewable energy
    • water management

Guest speaker
Logbook entry of primary data
Logbook entry of secondary data summary

15

assessment

School-assessed Coursework for Outcome 2 (40 marks)


Unit 4 Planner

WeekKey knowledgeAssessment / Practical experience

1

  • the pillars of sustainability, the interdependence between these pillars, and related critiques of sustainability

Practical experiences
Logbook entry of primary data
Logbook entry of secondary data summary

2

  • observable characteristics to assess the health of outdoor environments, including:
    • quality of water, air and soil
    • species and ecosystem biodiversity

3

  • the impact of threats on society and outdoor environments, including two of the following:
    • land degradation
    • introduced species
    • urbanisation
    • climate change
    • flood
    • fire

4

assessment

Unit 4 Area of Study 3
Outcome 3: Independent investigation and written report (40 marks)
(It is recommended that teachers conduct this assessment here, between the two units, so that students will not be overloaded with assessment tasks at the end of Unit 4.)

5

  • the importance of healthy outdoor environments for individual physical and emotional wellbeing, and for society now and into the future

Practical experiences
Logbook entry of primary data
Logbook entry of secondary data summary

6–7

  • local, national and international solutions and mitigation strategies to combat climate change across a range of environments

8

assessment

School-assessed Coursework for Outcome 1 (40 marks)

9

  • Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples’ land management strategies for achieving and maintaining healthy and sustainable outdoor environments

Practical experiences 
Logbook entry of primary data

10 –11

  • Acts or conventions related to the management and sustainability of a specific outdoor environment, species, or ecological community, including two of the following:
    • Flora and Fauna Guarantee Amendment Act 2019 (Vic)
    • Ramsar Convention (international treaty, 1971)
    • Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (Cmwth)
    • Victorian Environmental Assessment Council Act 2001
    • Planning Environment Act 1987 (Vic)

Practical experiences 
Logbook entry of primary data
Logbook entry of secondary data summary

12

  • community actions undertaken to sustain healthy outdoor environments, including two of the following:
    • regenerative farming
    • Trust for Nature
    • Landcare
    • community groups such as ‘Friends of…’

 

13

  • individual actions undertaken to promote and sustain healthy outdoor environments, including two of the following:
    • environmental activism
    • environmental advocacy
    • ethical and sustainable consumerism
    • green home design

Guest speaker
Logbook entry of primary data
Logbook entry of secondary data summary

14

assessment

School-assessed Coursework for Outcome 2 (40 marks)

15

Examination revision

 

16

Examination revision

 


Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Perspectives in the VCE

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Perspectives in the VCE
On-demand video recordings, presented with the Victorian Aboriginal Education Association Inc. (VAEAI) and the Department of Education (DE) Koorie Outcomes Division, for VCE teachers and leaders as part of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Perspectives in the VCE webinar program held in 2023.

Clarification of terminology

Traditional Owner groups

A Traditional Owner group is defined as including any native title holders and any persons who are recognised by the Attorney-General as the traditional owners of the land, based on Aboriginal traditional and cultural associations with the land. [Traditional Owner Settlement Act 2010 (Vic)]

Environmentalism

Concern about and action aimed at protecting the environment.

Community Groups such as ‘Friends of’

Friends or Community groups are individuals that come together to share common interests and be part of valuable conservation work. Members of these groups share their skills and knowledge of the flora and fauna that their area supports.

Indigenous peoples

The term ‘Indigenous Australian’ is used to encompass both Aboriginal people and Torres Strait Islander people. However many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people do not like to be referred to as ‘Indigenous’ as the term is considered too generic. Indigenous Australians: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people | AIATSIS

Kinship

Kinship is at the heart of First Nations society. A person’s position in the Kinship system establishes their relationship to others, to their Country and to the universe, prescribing their responsibilities towards other people, the land and natural resources.

Custodian

A person who has responsibility for taking care of or protecting something. Custodianship is the noun form of the word.

Country

Country is the term often used by Indigenous peoples to describe the lands, waterways and seas to which they are connected. The term contains complex ideas about law, place, custom, language, spiritual belief, cultural practice, material sustenance, family and identity: Welcome to Country | AIATSIS

Biome

A large naturally occurring community of flora and fauna occupying a major habitat; for example, forest or coastal.

Aboriginal Land and Water Councils

Australian community organisations, generally organised by region, that are commonly formed to represent the Indigenous Australians (both Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islander people) who occupied their particular region before the arrival of European settlers. They have historically advocated for recognition of traditional land rights, and also for the rights of Indigenous people in other areas, such as equal wages and adequate housing. Land councils are self-supporting, and not funded by state or federal taxes. They are also known as Aboriginal land councils, or land and sea councils.

Pillars of Sustainability

The three pillars are meant to work in connection to one another with true sustainability occurring when the three pillars are balanced.

Social sustainability includes environmental justice, human health, resource security, and education, among other important social elements of society. Under the three pillars concept, efforts to promote social sustainability should also aim to foster economic and environmental benefits, too.

Economic sustainability includes job creation, profitability, and proper accounting of ecosystem services for optimal cost-benefit analyses.

Environmental sustainability focuses on the wellbeing of the environment. This pillar includes water quality, air quality, and reduction of environmental stressors, such as greenhouse gas emissions.

Sustainability Pillar: Social, Environmen and Economics

Environmental advocacy

Environmental advocacy refers to activities that aim to protect the environment by influencing business and government decisions. The most powerful tool available to environmental advocacy campaigns is people power – the change-driving force of many people speaking and acting together in support of a campaign goal.

Environmental advocacy describes social action that occurs when communities are compelled by a tension between desired and actual environmental management.

Environmental advocacy can take many forms and opens doors to careers focused on conservation, alternative energy sources, policy-making, consulting and research.

Environmental activism

Environmental activism is defined as the actions of individuals or groups that aim to protect or support the environment. It is the implementation of direct action such as demonstrations or lobbying to pressure governments or organisations to enact policy changes. It can also involve the policy or action of using vigorous campaigning to bring about political or social change.

Sustainable consumption

Sustainable consumption is about doing more and better with less. Its aim is to increase resource efficiency and fair trade while helping to alleviate poverty and enable everyone to enjoy a good quality of life with access to food, water, energy, medicine and more.

Sustainable consumption practices include:
  • buying local and seasonal produce
  • following zero waste principles
  • changing energy consumption habits
  • swapping commercial experiences for meaningful hobbies.

Regenerative farming

Regenerative farming is a system of farming principles and practices that seeks to rehabilitate and enhance the entire ecosystem of the farm by placing a heavy premium on soil health with attention also paid to water management, fertiliser use, carbon sequestration and more.

Relationships

Human-nature relationships are very complex. There are many types of relationships including social, cultural, spiritual and physical. The following diagram represents one way of studying relationships within Australian outdoor environments. Perceptions of, interactions with, and impacts on outdoor environments are part of an interconnected understanding of these relationships.

Perception, Interactions and Impacts: Relationships in and with outdoor environments

Students are encouraged to go beyond this simplified diagrammatic approach in their understanding of, and writing about, these relationships. One useful way of doing that is to consider the use of metaphors as useful descriptors of and analogues for these relationships. Some examples that can be helpful include:

  • the outdoors as a mother
  • the outdoors as an adversary
  • the outdoors as a museum
  • the outdoors as a gym
  • the outdoors as a cathedral.

Primary data

Data collected in the field or outdoor environments that is reflective of the key knowledge and skills reported. Multiple sources of data collection provide credibility of findings. Examples of primary data collection may include field observations, participation in outdoor experiences and environments, photographs, sketches, interviews and reflections.

Secondary data

Information that someone else has collected and made available; for example, a teacher, CSIRO or Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action. When using secondary data it is imperative that the source is referenced and credible. Students may choose to justify their choice of secondary data.

Employability Skills

This study offers a number of opportunities for students to develop employability skills. The Support materials provide specific examples of how students can develop employability skills during learning activities and assessment tasks.

The VCE Outdoor and Environmental Studies course provides students with the opportunity to engage in a range of learning activities. In addition to demonstrating their understanding and mastery of the content and skills specific to the study, students may also develop employability skills through their learning activities.

The nationally agreed employability skills* are: Communication; Planning and organising; Teamwork; Problem solving; Self-management; Initiative and enterprise; Technology; and Learning.

The table links those facets that may be understood and applied in a school or non-employment-related setting to the types of assessment commonly undertaken in the VCE study.
Assessment taskEmployability skills selected facets

Plan and demonstrate safe and sustainable participation in outdoor environments

Initiative and enterprise (generating a range of options; being creative)
Planning and organising (collecting, analysing and organising information)
Communication (reading and interpreting documentation; using numeracy effectively; sharing information)
Problem solving (developing practical situations; showing independence and initiative in identifying problems and solving them)
Self-management
(evaluating and monitoring own performance; taking responsibility; having knowledge and confidence in own vision and goals; articulating own ideas and vision)

Explain the use of outdoor safety equipment and identify hazards, risks, and suggest controls for these.

Initiative and enterprise (generating a range of options; being creative)
Planning and organising (collecting, analysing and organising information)
Communication (reading and interpreting documentation; using numeracy effectively; sharing information; speaking clearly and directly; writing to the needs of the audience; persuading effectively)
Problem solving (developing practical situations; showing independence and initiative in identifying problems and solving them)

Completion of a case study
Completion of data or media analysis
Completion of a visual presentation

Planning and organising (collecting, analysing and organising information)
Problem solving (testing assumptions taking the context of data and circumstances into account)
Technology (having a range of basic IT skills)
Communication (reading and interpreting documentation; writing to the needs of the audience; empathising; persuading effectively)

Completion of structured questions or oral presentation.

Planning and organising (collecting, analysing and organising information)
Problem solving (showing independence and initiative in identifying problems and solving them)
Communication (reading and interpreting documentation; writing to the needs of the audience; persuading effectively)

Undertake an independent investigation into the changing relationships with and sustainability of at least two different visited outdoor environments

Presentation of a written report using collected evidence during practical experiences, and including analysis and evaluation of primary and secondary data

Planning and organising (managing time and priorities; collecting, analysing and organising information; planning the use of resources including time management; adapting resource allocations to cope with contingencies; implementing contingency plans; developing a vision and a proactive plan to accompany it)
Self-management (evaluating and monitoring own performance; taking responsibility; having knowledge and confidence in own vision and goals; articulating own ideas and vision)
Initiative and enterprise (translating ideas into action; implementing contingency plans)
Problem solving (showing independence and initiative in identifying problems and solving them; testing assumptions, taking the context of data and circumstances into account)
Communication (sharing information; using numeracy effectively; writing to the needs of the audience; persuading effectively)
Learning (being open to new ideas and change)
Technology (using IT to organise data; applying IT as a management tool)

*The employability skills are derived from the Employability Skills Framework (Employability Skills for the Future, 2002), developed by the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the Business Council of Australia, and published by the (former) Commonwealth Department of Education, Science and Training.

Implementation video

VCE Outdoor and Environmental Studies (2024-2028) implementation videos
Online video presentations which provide teachers with information about the new VCE Outdoor and Environmental Studies Study Design for implementation from 2024.

Outdoor experience hours: School and teacher guidance

VCE Outdoor and Environmental Studies – Outdoor experience hours: School and teacher guidance
This document provides school and teacher guidance regarding outdoor experience hours in VCE Outdoor and Environmental Studies.

Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions
A set of frequently asked questions for the VCE Outdoor and Environmental Studies Study Design Units 1-4: 2024-2028.