Machine Readable Australian Curriculum

Years 9 and 10

About this resource:

URI:
http://rdf.australiancurriculum.edu.au/elements/2018/05/41aed966-d82f-4322-b701-1682a37e7b98
Statement label:
Curriculum band
Description:

Learning in Design and Technologies builds on concepts, skills and processes developed in earlier years, and teachers will revisit, strengthen and extend these as needed.

By the end of Year 10 students will have had the opportunity to design and produce at least four designed solutions focused on one or more of the five technologies contexts content descriptions. There is one optional content description for each of the following: Engineering principles and systems, Food and fibre production, Food specialisations and Materials and technologies specialisations. There is an additional open content description to provide flexibility and choice. Students should have opportunities to experience creating designed solutions for products, services and environments.

In Year 9 and 10 students use design and technologies knowledge and understanding, processes and production skills and design thinking to produce designed solutions to identified needs or opportunities of relevance to individuals and regional and global communities. Students work independently and collaboratively. Problem-solving activities acknowledge the complexities of contemporary life and make connections to related specialised occupations and further study. Increasingly, study has a global perspective, with opportunities to understand the complex interdependencies involved in the development of technologies and enterprises. Students specifically focus on preferred futures, taking into account ethics; legal issues; social values; economic, environmental and social sustainability factors and using strategies such as life cycle thinking. Students use creativity, innovation and enterprise skills with increasing confidence, independence and collaboration.

Using a range of technologies including a variety of graphical representation techniques to communicate, students generate and represent original ideas and production plans in two and three-dimensional representations using a range of technical drawings including perspective, scale, orthogonal and production drawings with sectional and exploded views. They produce rendered, illustrated views for marketing and use graphic visualisation software to produce dynamic views of virtual products.

Students identify the steps involved in planning the production of designed solutions. They develop detailed project management plans incorporating elements such as sequenced time, cost and action plans to manage a range of design tasks safely. They apply management plans, changing direction when necessary, to successfully complete design tasks. Students identify and establish safety procedures that minimise risk and manage projects with safety and efficiency in mind, maintaining safety standards and management procedures to ensure success. They learn to transfer theoretical knowledge to practical activities across a range of projects.

Rights holder:
Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority
Rights:
© Copyright Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority
Subject:
http://vocabulary.curriculum.edu.au/framework/D
Part of:
http://rdf.australiancurriculum.edu.au/elements/2018/05/9b56e53f-9758-457e-80aa-e47eaf4eee63
Child of:
Has children:
Last modified:
2018-02-23T01:25:47+00:00

About this record:

http://rdf.australiancurriculum.edu.au/elements/2018/05/41aed966-d82f-4322-b701-1682a37e7b98.rdf
Rights holder:
Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority
Attribution name:
Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority
Attribution URL:
http://rdf.australiancurriculum.edu.au/elements/2018/05/41aed966-d82f-4322-b701-1682a37e7b98
Creator:
Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/au/
Last modified:
2019-03-03T10:56:09+00:00