Great Leaders Qualities
Overview
Unit Title: Democracy in Action
Lesson Number: 13 of 14
Lesson Title: Characteristics of a Good Representative
Year Level: 5–6
Lesson Duration: 45 minutes
Class Size: 22 students
Curriculum Area: Humanities and Social Sciences (HASS)
Australian Curriculum Reference:
- ACHASSK093 (Yr 5): The key features of the electoral process in Australia
- ACHASSK094 (Yr 5): Why people work in groups to achieve common goals and how they can influence one another
- ACHASSK144 (Yr 6): The responsibilities of electors and representatives in Australia's democracy
Learning Intentions
By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:
- Identify and describe key characteristics of effective political representatives in Australia.
- Evaluate which qualities are most important and justify their opinions.
- Reflect on the leadership values important in local and national government settings.
Success Criteria
Students will:
- Contribute to a class-wide "leadership brainstorm".
- Participate in small group discussion, listing characteristics of good representatives.
- Role-play and evaluate performance using a checklist of representative qualities.
- Justify their selection of the most important leadership attribute.
Resources Needed
- Whiteboard and markers
- Printed "Leadership Qualities Cards"
- Role-play scenario prompt cards (prepared in advance)
- Reflection worksheet: “What Makes a Good Representative?”
- Projector or large screen for visual prompts
- Butcher’s paper and markers for each small group
- A small ballot box or container and voting slips
Lesson Sequence
1. Warm-Up (5 mins)
Activity: Lightning Brainstorm
Teacher writes on the board: "What makes a good representative in government?"
Students contribute one-word answers which the teacher records. Words are grouped into categories (e.g., Personal Traits, Responsibilities, Skills).
Prompting Questions:
- What do we admire in good leaders?
- What should a politician always do?
2. Group Activity: Qualities Carousel (10 mins)
Structure: Small group rotation (5 groups of 4–5 students)
Task: Each group receives a large sheet of butcher’s paper with one of the following headings:
- Honesty & Integrity
- Communication Skills
- Fairness & Equity
- Community Engagement
- Decision-Making Ability
Groups brainstorm examples or situations that demonstrate this quality in political life. After 2 minutes, groups rotate to a new heading. Rotate until each group has contributed to each sheet.
Creative Twist: Introduce a “red flag” and “gold star” sticky note system for students to tag ideas they feel are most risky or ideal in real political life.
3. Role Play: The Candidate’s Forum (15 mins)
Scenario: Students pretend they are candidates for their local council and must convince voters they are the best choice. Each group selects a spokesperson to role-play a representative.
Instructions:
- Groups select 3–5 qualities from the brainstorm wall they think make a “perfect politician”.
- Use these to create a 1-minute campaign speech.
- Deliver speech to the class.
- Audience (rest of class) uses a checklist to award points based on the speech’s alignment with key values (communication, honesty, community focus, etc.)
Differentiation: Offer support cards for students who need sentence stems or visual aids for public speaking.
4. Class Discussion & Vote (5 mins)
Each student anonymously votes for the candidate that best embodied the “qualities of a good representative”. Use a ballot box.
Facilitate a short class discussion:
- Did you vote for someone who shared your values?
- What made their message effective?
5. Individual Reflection (10 mins)
Worksheet: “What Makes a Good Representative?”
Students complete a short reflection answering:
- What is the most important quality for a leader in Australia? Why?
- If you were elected, what would you promise to do to be a good representative?
Encourage them to illustrate themselves as MPs or councillors with two speech bubbles displaying what they would say to their community.
Assessment Opportunities
- Informal: Observation during group discussions and role-playing
- Formal: Reflection worksheet and checklist evaluation during speeches
Extension Activities (for early finishers)
- Design a badge or poster promoting one leadership trait (e.g., “Vote for Vision!”, “Honesty Always!”).
- Write a short speech from the perspective of a well-known local, state, or national representative.
Teacher Reflection Prompt
- Did students show an understanding of how leadership values link to democratic representation?
- Were students able to differentiate between personal characteristics and civic responsibilities?
- Which activity was most engaging and why?
Cross-Curricular Links
- English: Oral presentations, persuasive language, listening and responding
- The Arts: Visual design of campaign posters or political badges
- Civics & Citizenship: Deeper understanding of participatory democracy
Homework / Follow-Up
Ask students to interview a family member or neighbour about the top leadership quality they value in representatives. Bring responses to the final lesson (Lesson 14: Democracy in Action Showcase).
Additional Notes
This lesson places strong emphasis on real-life application, empathy, and values-based thinking. Unlike traditional lectures, the role-play component empowers students to “step into the shoes” of a leader, directly enhancing their civic identity. Feel free to film speeches for a class digital project!