Learning in community
The word ‘community’ meant many things. Tranby – under Alf Clint and later Kevin Cook and beyond – saw ‘community’ as something that people could strengthen and empower. Tranby encouraged people to build on Indigenous networks and knowledge to strengthen Indigenous communities. But as well, Tranby encouraged students to build alliances across racial, gender, culture and class barriers. The goal was to make communities with more justice for everyone for the future.
The NOW course
The Network of Older Women in Liverpool: invented and run by Aboriginal women.
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Local + multicultural
Aboriginal communities in local government in Leichhardt. Building links across cultures in the inner city.
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The Site Curators course
Classes across the state
Elders and activists training young Aboriginal people to protect their country.
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Community-controlled learning in many different places for skills that communities wanted like book-keeping, management and research.
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Music builds bridges
The Building Bridges concerts were just the start of collaborations between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal artists in music, performance and song.
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Learning on Country
Excursions so that Elders could teach Tranby students about places and communities they have not been before.
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