- The Croc Festival
The Croc Festival is an
Australia n event held annually in a number of locations in remote and rural areas and is produced by Indigenous Festivals of Australia. It engagesIndigenous Australians and non-Indigenous Australians with the aim of building partnerships and celebrating youth and traditional culture. Over three fun days, primary and high school students participate in activities related to arts, education, health, careers, sports, health andreconciliation . In the evenings students stage non-competitive school dance performances under the stars.History
Croc Festival was created in 1998 after the former
Queensland Minister for Health,Mike Horan , asked the producers of theRock Eisteddfod Challenge to find a way to get more indigenous students to attend school.The inaugural Croc Festival in
Weipa (far-north Queensland) in July 1998 attracted 350 students from 17 schools inCape York andTorres Strait . It was opened by the thenGovernor-General ,Sir William Deane , who observed that the event was “reconciliation in action“. In 2007 Croc Festival is expected to attract almost 20,000 students from 450 schools with a national audience of about 60,000 people.Croc Festival is 100% drug, alcohol and tobacco free. According to research and reports by teachers, outcomes for students include improved
self-esteem and teamwork, improvedtolerance of other students, awareness of personal health issues such asnutrition andmental health , and knowledge of the dangers of drugs, alcohol and tobacco. Further outcomes include increased rates of school attendance, improvedliteracy , numeracy and oratorical skills, and better goal setting for the future.Croc Festival in 2007 will be held on
Thursday Island in Queensland,Derby andMullewa in Western Australia,Alice Springs in the Northern Territory,Port Augusta in South Australia, Kempsey andDubbo in New South Wales, andShepparton in Victoria. Students travel by road, air and sea to reach the venues, often camping in tents at Croc Village during the three-day festival.The not-for-profit Croc Festival is supported by community businesses, local, state and federal government funding, corporate and philanthropic sponsorship, and in-kind support. Croc Festival and the
Rock Eisteddfod Challenge are part of theGlobal Rock Challenge family which engages youth in seven countries around the world.The Croc Festival was cancelled in 2008 as part of a larger shrinking and downsizing of the formerly successful Global Rock Challenge.
ee also
*
Rock Eisteddfod Challenge External links
* [http://www.crocfestival.org.au/ Croc Festival Official Site]
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