LEARNING IN Community
The Site Curators course
Elder Jacko Campbell was the driving force behind the site curators’ course. With Tranby and the Land Councils, Jacko wanted every regional council to have a person employed who could do the site survey for the region.
“Jacko Campbell wanted us to train Aboriginal sites officers or rangers. He hated the National Parks didn’t he. He reckoned they were insensitive and basically he wanted Aboriginal people to be able to run things themselves.”
- Kevin Cook, in Making Change Happen (Cook & Goodall, 2013)
The site curators’ course took shape as a joint venture between Tranby College and Land Councils, funded by the federal Department of Employment and Industrial Relations (DEIR). When the NSW Government were considering their Land Rights laws (eventually passed in 1983), a key community concern was protection of sacred sites and management of those sites. The Keane Report recommended, amongst other things, a Heritage Commission that would oversee sacred sites.
This recommendation was never pursued, in part, because National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) continued to be the lead agency in the management of cultural heritage. Limited community training was one reason NPWS continued to play a key role.
Site identification and recording training was offered by NPWS at Goulburn and Tranby College began supporting students enrolled in the course. By 1984 Tranby sought accreditation for site training that reflected Aboriginal values and that was embedded in Aboriginal Land Council management of lands and sites across the regions. 23 trainees were enrolled by 1984 from Aboriginal Land Councils across NSW. The training included several field trips and involved learning hands-on at various field trips to urban and regional sites, in the classroom and from one another.
Teaching by Elders
The Site Curators’ course was a separately accredited course, running out of Tranby and in cooperation with the State Land Council and it was accredited by TAFE. The course comprised five modules a year and it was based on recognising sites and how to record them and how to write a basic management plan for a site.
In 1985, the students made this joint submission to DAA, demanding the creation of an Aboriginal Heritage Commission. As they explained:
We are the practical expression of Aboriginal demands for control over Aboriginal heritage
LINKS
→ Report on the Tranby/Land Council Site Recorders Course in 1985 by course coordinator, David Morrisey. From the Meeting Tree Yearbook, 1985:39.
→ Aboriginal Heritage Protection in NSW, Submission to D.A.A