Create participants hard at work mapping out their story.
Dianne Moore, the ILF Programs Manager and chaperone, who comes from the Tiwi Islands looks forward to the Create program every year.
“Its’ my favourite time of year because I know the transition the girls will make over the week,” said Dianne, who’s more fondly known as Tictac. “I'm very lucky. I get to see their growth during the week and back in their Community when they have a finished book to show their families.”
This year, Shelley and Tictac once again witnessed remarkable transformations in the girls’ writing skills and self-confidence throughout the week. Shelley remembered how quiet the group was when they first arrived in Sydney.
“The girls went from being unsure of themselves to reading aloud work that they were proud of. It was pretty special,” she said. “We watched them flourish and grow.”
“That inner belief they gain from the program is then shared within their Community to create what I believe are pathways to intergenerational change.”
Tictac added that the girls live an adult lifestyle during the week in terms of waking up early and going to work in an office during the whole day.
“They grow up in the program. I like to say they come here as girls and go home as women. They have a little more pride and maturity.”
Tiwi College school teacher Ashlee Healey, who travelled to Sydney with the group, said the first copies of Tiwi Girl Hunters have already been read in classrooms and many younger students asked about the trip and the writing process.
“The trip harnesses their natural strength as storytellers and allows them a space to showcase this whilst building confidence in writing and learning about creating books.”