Classroom lesson 路 Surf馃嚘馃嚭 Australia

Surf culture

Why Australia loves the beach

Aerial view of Bondi Beach, with golden sand and turquoise water

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Most Australians live within an hour of the sea, and the beach is part of everyday life. Surfing - standing on a board and riding a wave back to the shore - is one of Australia's favourite things. Bondi Beach in Sydney is one of the most famous beaches in the world, with golden sand and bright blue water.

Tell me more

Australia has more than 10,000 beaches. If you visited a new one every day, it would take more than 27 years to see them all. The coastline is so long that you could fit the coast of Britain, France and Italy along it and still have plenty left over.

Surfing came to Australia from Hawaii about 100 years ago. Today, Aussie kids often learn to surf around the same age they learn to ride a bike. There are 'Nippers' clubs at many beaches, where children learn to swim through waves, paddle a board, and look after each other in the water.

Every busy Australian beach has lifeguards in red-and-yellow caps who watch the water and put up flags. The rule is simple: swim between the two flags, where it's safest. Kids learn this rule the way other kids learn to look both ways before crossing the road.

Beach culture isn't just about surfing. Australians also love bodyboarding, building sandcastles, finding shells, having barbecues by the sea, and watching the sun come up or go down over the water. On a hot weekend, half the country seems to be at the beach.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01If you live near the sea, how does that change your weekends? If you don't, what would you do differently?
  2. 02Why do you think lifeguards put up flags? What does it mean if everyone follows the same rules?
  3. 03What's a skill kids in your country learn really young? Compare with surfing.
Try this

Classroom activity

On a sheet of paper, draw your dream beach day. Include: the weather, what you'd bring, who you'd be with, and one new skill you'd try. Share your beach days as a class - any patterns?