Feral deer on
a foggy morning
By andrewmckenzie65 · · From Pic of the Week
Feral deer on a foggy morning in Raymond Terrace Published 17 May
2017. Raymond Terrace
NSW 2324
Where the
mountains meet the plains
By melanie_jenson · · From Pic of the Week
Edgeroi, NSW. Published 17 May 2017 Edgeroi NSW 2390
Smoke adding
an eerie feel to this shot
By sammjc23 · · From Pic of the Week
Afternoon walk, Wimmera River Published 17 May
2017. Drung VIC 3401
Sunrise on
Craig's Hut in the Victorian High Country
By james_terry70 · · From Pic of the Week
This is the set from the movie Man From Snowy River. No snow but a heavy
frost. Published 17 May
2017. Mount Buller VIC
3723
Making a
better future through education
My name is John Schultz and I work with the Worimi Aboriginal Land
Council at Port Stephens.
There are a few businesses the land council runs. One of them is Sand
Dune Adventures, if it’s an adrenaline rush that you want. We also for cultural
tours of the sand dunes.
We’ve got the biggest sand dunes in the southern hemisphere, and what
not many people know is there’s a fresh water river that flows underneath it.
All the greenery that you see at Stockton Beach, if you dig down,
there’s actually fresh water under there.
They say it’s better than tap water because it’s been purified and
filtered through the sand so it’s nice and fresh and it’s always cold when you
dig it out.
As a cultural officer for the land council I enjoy doing Aboriginal
dancing for kids that come from local primary school, sometimes as many 140
students in one day.
Traditional Aboriginal dancing, I just love it; it’s where I’m from, and
I connect more to the culture through the dancing of it.
I am a descendant of the Worimi people, we’ve been here for a long time.
If you see a black fella you always wave and say hello because you never know
it could be your first, second or third cousin.
People call me Happy John, but that hasn’t always been the case.
When I was in primary school I moved around a lot. I went to about seven
different schools and ended up on the New South Wales South Coast and then I
did my year 10 all the way down there.
I came to Hunter River High at Raymond Terrace to do Year 11, before my
life went off the tracks. I went down to Sydney, drank, and smoked, did a lot
of dumb stuff, didn’t go to school.
What do Aboriginal
Education Officers do?
One day Brooke Roach, the Aboriginal Education Officer (AEO) from Hunter
River High School, rang me up one day and said ‘come back up and finish
school’.
If Brooke hadn’t rung me and called me back to school I don’t know what
would have happened.
The 1967 Referendum that recognised Aboriginal people in the
constitution led to new Commonwealth Government policies and programs to
improve the education of Aboriginal people.
Aboriginal education officers (AEOs) is an example of how Commonwealth
government funds the State governments to work in schools where significant
numbers of Aboriginal students are enrolled.
Brooke said to me: ‘if you’re not going to get on the train and come
back up, I’m going to come down and get you’.
I was scared enough to get on the train by myself, and he picked me up
from the Newcastle train station and brought me back to school.
I ended up living with him for two years until I finished my Year 12.
Brooke and his family, and three kids, they call me their black kid,
sometimes. When I lived with him they just adopted me as their own black child.
Because they’re Aboriginal of course as well, but they’ve got fair skin kids,
and I count them as my brothers.
With the people I’m surrounded by now, I count them as family. I know if
f I get into trouble or anything bad happens I can always count on them,
they’re always there.
I guess you could say I’m a role model for my community. I knew what I
was doing was wrong and I grew sick of it. I knew that I was in the wrong and I
knew that I could do better.
My family all smoke and drink, and I knew I’ve had to make a change
somewhere in my family line, so I thought I’d step up and do it.
Now I’ve got a car a job, and a child, so I’m actually pretty happy that
I took the time and took Brooke’s advice and came back up and finished school.
It was pretty terrifying but at the same time I just learnt to just put
it all behind me and move on because I can’t dwell on it because I’m not that
sort of person.
Finding the drive
to do better
Playing sport taught me about finding the drive to try to do better.
I was in Year 11 and I ended up going to the South Coast Rugby League
trials for the NSW schoolboys side. I made it all the way to the second
division in it, so if I’d finished that I would have been in the first which is
the New South Wales.
It made me push on. It made me want to do better in Year 12. It’s a good
achievement to get. It gives you more of a drive, so you try to do the same
thing, and see if you can get it next year.
Getting my HSC was awesome. I’m the first out of five kids in my family
to get it. It feels pretty good.
I’m the second youngest so it shows that I actually am going to go
places, and I can do stuff if I put my mind to it.
Recently I became a dad, which is a new challenge that I’m ready for. My
sisters and my brothers, they’ve all had kids, and when I was young we used to
look after them a lot.
I’ve nursed kids since they were born, so it’s really like a sort of
second language to me, so I know what I’m expected of and what I can do for my
kid.
Education will be a priority for my child. My child won’t be able to say
‘I’m not going to do Year 12 because you didn’t go to Year 12’.
One day I would like to go back to university, because I’m really
interested in teaching, that’s what I wanted to do after school, but I had the
year off instead of going to uni.
Now I’ve started working at the land council they’ve got big plans and
futures for me here and this year I’ve started working full-time. Having a
full-time job excites me, because I know that I’m always going to get an
income.
But university is always open and it’s an always an option to anyone, so
at the end you’re going to get the degree and you’re going to get a good job
out of it.
Money is important, to make a better future for yourself and your kids,
because if you don’t have no money, the education, you’re not going to have all
these things, and have to rely on benefits such as Centrelink. I’m over
Centrelink, I’ve done it all my life. Now it’s time to get my own job and start
a new future for me and my family.
I feels like I’ve broken the history in my family. I’m the first one to
finish school, I’m actually the first one to get my licence and a car that’s in
my name, and has insurance. It just helps out a lot for what you want to do if
you’ve got big dreams like I do.
My dreams are pretty big here at Worimi Land Council. I’m looking at not
running the place, but being one of the head people in where I’m working at the
moment. It will be good if I can get on that stepping stone, and can stay there
and commit and put the effort in.
Produced with the assistance of ABC
Newcastle’s Jill Emberson and Anthony Scully.
Published 18 May
2017. Williamtown NSW
2318
Saturday
ritual at the local Farmers Market
By simplycheecky · · From My Back Roads
Not being a 'snob' but you can taste the difference between the stuff
you buy in supermarkets and the farmers market. And the most important thing is
nothing can beat the interaction with the farmers. Published 04 May
2017. Canberra ACT
2601
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