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Picture dictations are great for providing an overview of a topic so that
students have some hooks on which they can hang the new knowledge that they
might encounter during the study.
Students divide a page into (in this example) a 12-square grid. Number each
square from 1 to 12.
Teacher reads each sentence out twice. Students LISTEN carefully and draw a
picture (stick figures are fine) in the appropriate grid square to represent
that sentence.
It can be very useful, especially for students who have little or no prior
knowledge of the topic, to have posters and images up around the room that
they can refer to for ideas. Some of us find it very challenging to think of
images let alone draw them. It is important to stress that the drawings do
NOT have to be works of art - and the occasional word or number is OK.
When the dictation has been completed students get into pairs and tell each
other about Gallipoli using their drawings as stimulus material.
What happened at Gallipoli?
Picture Dictation - key points: e.g.
- French and German battleships tried to force their way through the
Dardanelles to Constantinople in February 1915 but were badly damaged by
mines and withdrew.
- The Allies then decided to send an army of British, French, and ANZAC
Corps to attack the Gallipoli Peninsula and cut across land to the
Dardanelles.
- The plan went wrong from the start when the Royal Navy landed the
Australians on the wrong beach at dawn on the morning of 25 April 1915.
- Instead of plains and low hills the Australians were landed on a narrow
beach with steep cliffs.
- Twelve thousand Australians landed but they were disorganised by the
rough ground (ridges and deep deep valleys) in front of them so they didn't
attack the high ground as planned.
- While the Australians were getting organised the Turkish soldiers led by
Colonel Mustafa Kemal counter-attacked.
- As the Turks advanced the New Zealanders began landing. The Auckland
Battalion was first ashore.
- The fighting was terrible. All the New Zealand officers and
non-commissioned officers (sergeants and corporals) were killed or wounded
that first day.
- About 3100 New Zealanders landed on Anzac Day. 1500 actually fought and
there were 600 - 700 New Zealand casualties.
- All that the ANZACs could do was dig in on that narrow strip of land -
and pray.
- The wounded were evacuated by ship but it was impossible to keep
accurate records, so many families back in New Zealand had to wait for months
to find out if their men were alive or not.
- The ANZACs hung on for nine months, losing thousands of men without
gaining any land. The Gallipoli Campaign was a disaster.
This material has been produced by UNITEC Institute of Technology
under contract to the Ministry of Education.
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