Acknowledgements

Images

  • Two children looking at tablet device: © Education Services Australia

Videos

  • ‘Aboriginal English just sounds like English to me’, video taken from the Ways of Being, Ways of Talk resource courtesy of Department of Education, Western Australia. Reproduced with permission.

  • ‘Foundations for success – Being a communicator – language development strategies in Indigenous early education’, State of Queensland (Department of Education and Training) 2017. Content is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution licence with the exception of the third-party content which is separately acknowledged.

  • ‘Recognising speakers of Aboriginal English in the classroom’, video taken from the Ways of Being, Ways of Talk resource courtesy of Department of Education, Western Australia. Reproduced with permission.

  • ‘The benefits of a bilingual brain’, Mia Nacamulli, TEDEd, ed.ted.com.

  • ‘The most common language spoken by Aboriginal Australians is Aboriginal English’, video taken from the Ways of Being, Ways of Talk resource courtesy of Department of Education, Western Australia. Reproduced with permission.

  • ‘Yumplatok (Torres Strait Creole) #1’, modified from: Miss Roseanne & Ms Maugeri, Yumplatok (Torres Strait creole) #1 © State of Queensland (Department of Education) 2021, Creative Commons BY 4.0.

  • ‘Yumplatok (Torres Strait Creole) #2’, modified from: Miss Roseanne & Ms Maugeri, Yumplatok (Torres Strait creole) #2 © State of Queensland (Department of Education) 2021, Creative Commons BY 4.0.

  • ‘Yumplatok (Torres Strait Creole) #3’, modified from: Miss Roseanne & Ms Maugeri, Yumplatok (Torres Strait creole) #3 © State of Queensland (Department of Education) 2021, Creative Commons BY 4.0.

  • ‘Yumplatok (Torres Strait Creole) #4’, modified from: Miss Roseanne & Ms Maugeri, Yumplatok (Torres Strait creole) #4 © State of Queensland (Department of Education) 2021, Creative Commons BY 4.0.