PRE-SALE INFORMATION
Order your DYJESBT First Nations Training Strategy Polo here
-

Ends 5pm, Thursday 29th of February 2024.
- Polos $49 Including GST 
- FREE DELIVERY

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
DYJESBT Online Store
Polo Pre-Sale Campaign

HOW LONG DO I HAVE PLACE AN ORDER?
You have until February 29th 2024 to place your order.

WHEN DOES THE STORE CLOSE?
The DYJESBT Pre-Sale Campaign ends 5pm, Thursday 29th of February 2024.

WHEN CAN I EXPECT TO RECIEVE MY ORDER?
4-6 Weeks after ordering your Polo.
PLEASE NOTE: all orders will be produced at the end of every month until February 2024

WHERE MY ORDER BE DELIVERED TO?
Orders will be delivered to the department. Please advise of DYJESBT, Division and Working Unit (ie Regional Office) in the COMPANY NAME section when placing your order.

Thank you for your purchase and support!

STAY DEADLY
Team Phyre
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Paving The Way

Through this custom embodied design titled, Paving the Way, the artists have represented the landscape of cultural connection and opportunities from a bird's eye view. Linework represents expanding pathways of growth, where each pathway explores the various touchpoints of both education and training.

The embodied design is broken up into three key segments (known at triptych). Each segment explores its own representations of growth and capability building. Within this series, each design can exist separately and as a collective, which speaks broadly to building and growing capability and community capacity.

This embodied design, 'Paving the Way', was created in 2022 for the Department of Employment, Small Business and Training by Iscariot Media's artistic team. Michael Ah Kee (Yidinji, Kuku Talanji, Waanyi, Koko Berrin), Stephanie Evans (Kooma and Maori) and Matrisse Watego (Aboriginal and South Sea Islander).

Also incorporated into the design of Paving the Way is artwork from Jessie Mordey nee Ketchell. Jessie grew up in Waiben (Thursday Island) in Kenath Kes (the Torres Strait) and is a descendant of Dauar Eb Clan from Mer (Murray Island) and Maluigal, Wakaid Clan from Badu Island.

The storyline of this design draws on totems that keeps our communities connected to ancestors. The drum and headdress is about getting together and celebrating cultural heritage.

DYJESBT staff acknowledge and pay respect to the Traditional Owners and ongoing Custodians of the lands on which our schools are built and where learning takes place. We pay our respects to Elders, past, present & emerging and recognise their continuing connection to Country and ways of learning over thousands of years.