Text Water and human wellbeing

TLF ID M018188

This is an online resource about water availability on Flores, an Indonesian island, highlighting the importance of access to sufficient safe drinking water for the wellbeing of a community. It describes a project carried out by a partnership between AusAID, World Vision and local communities, to provide access to a plentiful supply of clean water and so reduce the risk of water-borne diseases. It includes a video featuring interviews with villagers involved in the project and describes the process of identifying a water access problem, planning a solution, and implementing the strategy – gravity feeding water from a spring some distance away. The resource includes maps, photographs, student activities and a list of resources.





Educational details

Educational value
  • This resource is of significant value in supporting the Geography curriculum for year 7 particularly for the content descriptions in Water in the world referring to the forms that water takes as a resource; and the ways that flows of water connect places as it moves through the environment and the way this affects places; and the nature of water scarcity and ways of overcoming it in a sustainable way. The resource provides a case study about a project on Flores, an Indonesian Island, to improve their source of drinking water from limited amounts of well water to a constant flow of clean spring water. It explains how a pipeline was constructed to gravity-feed water from a spring 27 kilometres away and describes negotiations between the communities to benefit from the access to running water and the leaders of the village who own the spring. It is also of significant value in supporting the Geography curriculum for year 10, particularly for the content descriptions in Geographies of human wellbeing referring to reasons for and consequences of spatial variations in human wellbeing on a regional scale within a country of the Asia region; and the interconnections with international and national government and non-government organisations; initiatives in improving human wellbeing in Australia and other countries. The case study illustrates how the difference between regions in their access to clean water can lead to inequalities in health and other indicators of wellbeing. It describes the roles played by AusAID and World Vision Australia in a project that improved the wellbeing of villagers on Flores and details positive outcomes including the economic benefits of brick-making, made viable by access to a plentiful water supply. The resource supports the Sustainability cross-curriculum priority, particularly the organising ideas referring to sustainable patterns of living relying on the interdependence of healthy social, economic and ecological systems; the sustainability of ecological, social and economic systems being achieved through informed individual and community action that values equity; actions for a more sustainable future reflecting values of care, respect and responsibility, requiring us to explore and understand environments; and designing action for sustainability requiring an evaluation of past practices, the assessment of scientific and technological developments, and balanced judgments based on projected future impacts. It is also relevant to the Asia and Australias engagement with Asia cross-curriculum priority, particularly the organising idea about Australians playing a significant role in social, cultural, political and economic developments in the Asia region.
Year level

7; 8; 9; 10

Other details

Contributors
  • Contributor
  • Name: Education Services Australia
  • Organization: Education Services Australia
  • Description: Data manager
  • Address: VIC, AUSTRALIA
  • URL: http://www.esa.edu.au/
  • Copyright Holder
  • Name: World Vision Australia
  • Organization: World Vision Australia
  • URL: http://www.worldvision.com.au
  • Publisher
  • Name: World Vision Australia
  • Organization: World Vision Australia
  • Description: Publisher
  • URL: http://www.worldvision.com.au
  • Resource metadata contributed by
  • Name: Education Services Australia Ltd
  • Organisation: Education Services Australia Ltd
  • Address: AUSTRALIA
  • URL: www.esa.edu.au
Access profile
  • Unknown
Learning Resource Type
  • Text
  • Video
Rights
  • © 2014 World Vision Australia. You are encouraged to use images, videos and text from the World Vision website to educate yourself and others. See the website’s Terms and Conditions for limitations that apply.