The Last Tree

by Mark Wilson

Picture book

32 pp | Years 5–6

Student and Teacher Resources

» Getting Started

» Activities

» Assessment

Purchase book

Single copy
$28.95

Pack of four
$115.00


Getting Started

Learning for life

  • What we believe and do is intertwined with the society and culture in which we live.
  • Every living thing has a right to exist and to have its needs respected and protected.
  • All living things depend on the environment around them for survival.
  • All living things are interconnected and interdependent, and the balance can be delicate.
  • Many spaces and species are threatened because of human impact on the environment.
  • Humans are ultimately responsible for the state of the environment and its protection for the future.
  • Environments change over time and these changes can be caused by nature or humans.
  • Changes, whether natural or artificial, can affect whole systems and the environment both for better and for worse.
  • There are local, national and international agencies that promote environmental protection.
  • I may only be one child but I can make a difference.

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Overview

The Last Tree is a book that works on many levels for many ages. Younger readers can read along the lines and learn about the diversity and dependence of life in a tree, while more mature readers will read between and beyond the lines to explore the impact of human urbanisation and habitat destruction.

At the centre of the story is a beautiful old eucalyptus tree that has grown tall and strong over hundreds of years. The tree shelters and houses many different types of wildlife and, as the city limits encroach, so much more than the tree itself is threatened.

The Last Tree is an example of a true picture book with text and illustrations so intertwined that they are as symbiotic as the relationship between the tree and its environment.

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Author profile

Mark Wilson has both authored and illustrated this book, demonstrating his interest in and love for the environment and its conservation.

He was born in Melbourne in 1949 and has always loved drawing. As a child, he spent most evenings drawing on huge sheets of paper that his dad brought home from work. Later, Mark studied mural design and painting and did a Diploma in Education the following year.

In the early seventies, Mark was a designer and illustrator for student magazines for the Victorian Education Department. At the same time he was in a heavy rock band called Centrefold and then another called Piranha. He still sings with The Dodgy Chairs.

Much of his painting is involved with conservation and wildlife, particularly endangered species. He developed a love of nature and the bush when his family moved to East Gippsland.

Mark's other books include A Prayer for the Animals, Yellow-Eye (author David Spillman), Carpet of Dreams (author Tessa Duder), The Penguin Shore (author Tim O'Brien), Young Murphy (author Gary Crew) and The Extinction Trilogy (also authored by Gary Crew). Mark has won a number of awards for his work, from both the Children's Book Council of Australia and the Wilderness Society. He has also won the Whitley Award for Children's Literature three times, including for The Last Tree in 2007. This is an award which 'recognises and rewards outstanding grass-roots nature conservationists around the world'.

Find out more about the author at www.marklwilson.com.au/

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Useful websites

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Focus questions

Before reading the book

  • What do you think a story entitled The Last Tree might be about?
  • How do you feel when you see a title like that?
  • How do the illustrations on the title and preliminary pages set the scene for what is to come?
  • What is an 'old growth' forest?
  • Where in Australia can you find them?
  • Why are they under threat?
  • What lives in an old growth forest?
  • How would these inhabitants be affected if the forest trees were destroyed?
  • What sort of things might destroy a forest?

During reading the book

  • How do the text and illustrations on the first pages of the story set the tone for what is to come?
  • Why are eucalypts such a significant part of Australian old growth forests?
  • How old do you think 'the last tree' might be?
  • What clues are there to help you determine this?
  • If this story is set in East Gippsland, why has the illustrator included a Tasmanian tiger in the illustration on page 7?
  • How is the picture on pages 10–11 significantly different to that on pages 18–19? Why is this difference crucial to the story?
  • How much time might have elapsed between the picture on pages 10–11 and those on pages 18–19?
  • What is the key difference between the creatures in the picture on pages 10–11 and those in pages 18–19?
  • Why do you think the artist portrayed them this way?
  • What are some of the other illustrative techniques that the artist has used to enrich the story and enhance the message without using words?
  • How many different creatures can you count as you read the story?
  • How many can you name?
  • Which parts of the tree support other creatures?
  • What can you learn from the border illustrations on pages 16–17 and 20–21?
  • Why is the tree 'the centre of life in the forest'?
  • How does the picture of the tree on pages 22–23 differ from that on pages 10–11?
  • Why did the encroaching city have such an impact on the tree, even though the tree itself was not removed?
  • Why did the tree die?
  • Was the tree really dead?
  • What message does the journey of the seed give us?
  • What is the likelihood that this new tree will survive like the old tree and become part of an old growth forest? Why?

After reading the book

  • Does it matter if the old tree died?
  • Does it matter if the forest is destroyed? Why?
  • What have you learnt from reading this book?
  • Is it a tale of hope or despair?
  • When you reflect on the book, what messages and images form in your mind?
  • How have the text and illustrations contributed to these messages and images?
  • What do you think was the author's motivation in writing and illustrating the story in this way?
  • How do you know?
  • Was he successful?
  • Did this book influence or change your thinking? How?

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