Forward December 2015 | Page 45

PR E PA R ATORY S C HO OL The state-of-the-art $22 million development was designed with flexibility in mind. The classrooms are devoid of fixed furnishings so that the spaces can be easily rearranged and reinterpreted to accommodate the needs of the learning at any given time. This flexibility includes the ability to collaborate between classes, as they can be linked or closed off as separate units. The development incorporates a new administration building set atop the new café. The café, and in fact the entire gathering area of the development, reflects the strong sense of community that exists within the School. The classroom precinct comprises three wings. The Year 1 and 2 wing and the Year 3 and 4 wing both comprise of six classrooms in each building, accompanied by a large break-out space. The Year 5 and 6 wing comprises eight classrooms, a linking break-out space and a multi-purpose room to accommodate Science and Art teaching. The learning spaces will be complemented by interactive learning technologies and generous IT provision. The three new wings have been named in honour of three Nyoongar leaders, in consultation with the Whadjuk People, the traditional owners of the land on which Guildford Grammar School sits. The buildings will be named: • Joobaitch (Kangaroo skin group) from the Swan, Guildford and Canning districts who died in 1907 and is buried in Guildford. The three Whadjuk elders and lawmen, Joobaitch, Woolba and Monop are incredibly significant leaders as they shared and recorded their traditional stories with non-Aboriginal people. Today these stories are recognised as passing on important aspects of traditional cultural and ecological knowledge, still of great relevance to the Nyoongar, in Perth and the Southwest. • Woolba (Black Swan skin group) from Gingin, who died in 1913. • Yued Elder Monop was known for his musical ability and provided the Kyli or boomerang music as an accompaniment to the songs. • Monop (Dingo skin group) from Victoria Plains, who died in 1913. • Boora Elder Woolba was a traditional member of the Gingin families. He was one of the happiest Indigenous people Daisy Bates had ever met and upon arriving at a camp he would break into dance. He was strongly cultured in Indigenous knowledge and knew his traditions and lore well. He was always willing to share this information with non-Indigenous people. • Ballaruk Elder Joobaitch of the Kangaroo skin group of Perth, was a lawman of the Guildford area. He grew up among the colonists, keeping to his laws but also becoming familiar with the European ways. He was a protégé of Bishop Hale and at one time a native trooper. They made him a sort of police official, to track and catch convicts and as a go-between for the other natives. His immediate family were the earliest amongst the dispossessed groups, whose title to the Swan Banks, and their Boodja (country) had been theirs for hundreds of generations. The three leaders were of great importance to the region and led the delegation that performed for the Royal visit to Australia in 1901, when the then Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York visited. The group performed at Bennett Brook at Success Hill. They danced the spider dance, which the Guildford Grammar School Boodjar Bidi boys now perform. In the planning stages of the development, Mr Webber, Mr Peters and Mr Krause travelled interstate to view examples of celebrated educational spaces and significant consultation was undertaken with experts in 45