Ngoonjook seeks to make relevant material available to an Indigenous readership and to all those interested in Indigenous Australian issues. Themes explored include: education, health, cultural identity, natural and cultural resource management, the arts and linguistics.
The Crèche Kit is a resource designed to help children’s services staff in remote communities learn the basic skills to run their own children’s service. The kit was developed with the Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations funding, by staff from Batchelor Institute and Charles Darwin University, NT.
Ngoonjook seeks to make relevant material available to an Indigenous readership and to all those interested in Indigenous Australian issues. Themes explored include: education, health, cultural identity, natural and cultural resource management, the arts and linguistics.
Batchelor Press is pleased to announce the forthcoming distribution of the ‘The Creche Kit: working together for our kids’.
This book is designed to provide information and ideas for those who work in a creche – especially in remote indigenous communities. The accompanying DVD contains the printing files for useful resources, such as activity sheets, administrative forms, posters and books.
Aboriginal knowledge of flora and fauna from the Moyle River and Neninh areas, north Australia
Marri Ngarr & Magati Ke plants and animals is the largest ethnobiology ever published in the Northern Territory. It is the result of extensive work by over 40 people and contains the Marri Ngarr and Magati Ke traditional names and ecological knowledge for over 660 plants and animals. It also includes the scientific names, English common names and the Murrinhpatha names.
A colourful clay animation made through a collaboration of Batchelor Institute students with Arlparra Secondary School in 2009. This DVD is in the Anmatyerr language.
A DVD of films that represent life at Utopia. The films document a language, art and bush medicine project that commenced in 2008.
Utopia is located on the traditional lands of the Alyawarr and Anmatyerr peoples, approximately 300km northeast of Alice Springs. Utopia comprises 16 or so small communities dotted throughout the Sandover region.
Some of the bush medicines in the films are: ilpengk - a liniment, arnwekety - a spiny plant used to treat warts, lywemp-lywemp - a bush cosmetic
A colourful sound chart with words and pictures to illustrate each sound.
This poster is available in a number of Aboriginal languages. Each poster is unique, with its own alphabet, images and sounds.
We can translate this poster into your language for an AU$85 fee.