|    Login    |    Register

Two Ways Strong: Jaz's Story

(Paperback)

Available Formats


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Two Ways Strong: Jaz's Story

Contributors:

By (Author) Claire Scobie
By (author) Indigenous Literacy Foundation
By (author) Kristine Ellis

ISBN:

9780994465467

Publisher:

Indigenous Literacy Foundation

Imprint:

Indigenous Literacy Foundation

Publication Date:

25th July 2017

Country:

Australia

Classifications

Readership:

Children

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Main Subject:

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

48

Dimensions:

Width 194mm, Height 231mm, Spine 3mm

Weight:

162g

Description

Going to boarding school can be a difficult transition for many students, but for Indigenous students from remote communities, it can be quite a culture shock. In Two Ways Strong, Indigenous students from Concordia Lutheran College have combined to tell their experience in a story about Jaz a young girl from Palm Island who goes to boarding school at the age of fourteen. Jaz has many challenges to face, not least having to speak English and make herself understood. Her fellow Indigenous students help to ease the way for her but ultimately it's up to Jaz to make the most of what boarding school has to offer. As she becomes accustomed to school life, has fun with her friends and has academic success, Jaz realises just how much she has gained and grown in the time she's been at school. She's no longer just one way strong like she was on Palm Island, she's now two ways strong and ready to take on the world.

Author Bio

Two Ways Strong: Jaz's Story is written by 14 Indigenous students from Concordia Lutheran College: The Deadly Mob from Concordia. The students are all from communities in Queensland-from as far as Dauan Island in the Torres Strait to Hopevale, Mareeba, Lockhart River, Wujal Wujal and Palm Island on the north-east coast to Cherbourg in the central south west. The book was produced by the students during a writing workshop with Claire Scobie, the author of the travel memoir Last Seen in Lhasa and the novel, The Pagoda Tree, and Kristine Ellis, a writer and poet who has links to the Wakka Wakka people and also to Kiriri (Hammond Island) in the Torres Strait.

See all

Other titles by Claire Scobie

See all

Other titles from Indigenous Literacy Foundation