HSC Legal Studies · Crime · Teacher Resource

Chapter 5 — Young Offenders

Lesson plan & teaching sequence · NESA Legal Studies Stage 6 (2009)
Teacher copy — includes answers

At a glance

Topic: Crime (Core, 30%) — Chapter 5
Duration: ~3–4 lessons (≈ 3–4 × 50 min)
Class: Year 11/12 Legal Studies
Mode: Explicit teaching (deck) + activities + "raise the age" debate

Companion resources

Teaching slide deck (project this)
Student study/review page
Activity materials handout (print for students)
Crime Study Guide (cases, essays, self-test)
Crime resource index (teacher)

Syllabus mapping — "Young offenders"

Students learn about:

age of criminal responsibilitydoli incapaxrights of children when questioned/arrestedChildren (Criminal Proceedings) Act 1987Young Offenders Act 1997penalties for children

Students learn to

Relevant themes & challenges

Lesson sequence & timings (3–4 lessons)

TimePhaseTeacher does / saysSlides
L1: 0–10'Starter / hookBell-work: "Should a 10-year-old be able to be charged with a crime? What about a 13-year-old?" Surface intuitions before teaching the law.1–2
L1: 10–35'Age & doli incapaxTeach 5.1 — minimum age 10; the three bands; correct the notes (10–13 is rebuttable). Teach RP v The Queen. Run Activity 1.3–6
L1: 35–50'Activity 2Apply RP v The Queen; debrief what evidence can rebut the presumption (not the act alone).
L2: 0–20'Models & reformTeach 5.2 — welfare vs justice; CROC; the "raise the age" debate (ACT to 14; NSW at 10). Set up Activity 5 (debate).7–9
L2: 20–50'Rights on arrestTeach 5.3 — support person (admissions inadmissible without one), caution, searches, forensic procedures. Run Activity 3 (spot the breach).10–12
L3: 0–20'Children's CourtTeach 5.4 — closed court, no jury, s 6 principles, the Clinic; contrast with adult courts.13–14
L3: 20–50'Young Offenders Act & penaltiesTeach 5.5–5.6 — the diversion hierarchy (warnings/cautions/conferences) and penalties (detention last resort, youth justice centre). Run Activity 4.15–19
L4 (opt.): 0–35'Debate + consolidateRun the "raise the age" debate (Activity 5). Recap slide; Self-Test.20
L4: 35–50'CheckExit ticket + set the extended-response homework.

If squeezed to 3 lessons, set the "raise the age" debate (Activity 5) as a written paragraph for homework and keep Activities 1, 3 and 4 in class.

Activities & model answers

Activity 1 — Doli incapax bands

Key
Ava (8) → A, conclusively not responsible; rebut? N. Ben (12) → B, rebuttable; rebut? Y. Cleo (13) → B, rebuttable; rebut? Y. Dan (15) → C, full capacity; rebut? not applicable (N — no presumption to rebut). Evie (9) → A, conclusively not responsible; rebut? N. To rebut for a 12-year-old the prosecution must prove the child knew the act was seriously wrong (not merely naughty) — and per RP, not merely from the fact of doing it.

Activity 2 — RP v The Queen

Model answers
1. RP (~11½) was in the 10 to under 14 band → rebuttable presumption of doli incapax. 2. The conviction failed because the prosecution did not prove RP understood his conduct was seriously wrong. 3. Rebutting evidence can include: attempts to conceal or escape, and the child's background, education, maturity and prior conduct — but not an inference from the act alone. 4. Themes: moral & ethical standards; balancing rights (the child's rights vs community accountability).

Activity 3 — Rights on arrest: spot the breach

Key
Questioning a 14-year-old with no support person and using the admission → BREACH (right to a support person; the admission is generally inadmissible). Told of arrest + reason, reasonable force → OK. Strip search of a 9-year-old → BREACH (a child under 10 cannot be strip searched). Caution that they need not speak → OK (right to silence). DNA taken with no court order or support person → BREACH (forensic-procedure protections).

Activity 4 — Which diversion option?

Key
13-year-old, first minor graffiti → Warning (no admission needed). 15-year-old admits a second minor theft, consents → Caution. 16-year-old admits a more serious property offence, victim wants to take part → Youth justice conference (restorative, outcome plan). 17-year-old, serious assault causing real harm → Children's Court (too serious for diversion). Reinforce: cautions/conferences need admission + consent.

Activity 5 — "Raise the age" debate

Model arguments
To raise the age: medical evidence on child brain development; criminalising young children entrenches disadvantage and Aboriginal over-representation; the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child; the ACT (to 14) and Victoria (to 12) have moved. To keep it at 10: community safety and victims; doli incapax already protects 10–13-year-olds; the need to intervene early with harmful behaviour. Themes: law reform, moral & ethical standards, balancing rights. Reward students who cite a current source (AIHW, Justice and Equity Centre).

Key questioning (with answers)

Differentiation

  • Support: an age-band number line to place children on; a diversion "staircase" diagram to label (warning → caution → conference → court).
  • Extension: research the "raise the age" reforms across jurisdictions and evaluate against the CROC and Aboriginal over-representation data.
  • EAL/D: pre-teach "doli incapax", "rebuttable", "diversion", "support person", "control order"; bilingual glossary.

Assessment & homework

  • Exit ticket: the three age bands + what the prosecution must prove for 10–13.
  • Homework (extended response): "Evaluate the effectiveness of the criminal justice system in achieving justice for young offenders." Plan + intro + one body paragraph.
  • Check for understanding: doli incapax bands; support-person rule; the diversion hierarchy.

Useful resources & recent articles

For teacher background, class discussion, and to keep examples current:

Tip: the "raise the age" position changes by jurisdiction and year — check the current NSW status before teaching so the law-reform discussion is accurate.

Teacher note — source accuracy: the original student notes were OCR'd and badly corrupted here, and contained a legal error: they described the 10–13 doli incapax presumption as "conclusive" / "cannot be rebutted." That is wrong — for children 10 to under 14 the presumption is rebuttable (only under-10s are conclusively not responsible), as confirmed in RP v The Queen [2016] HCA 53. This resource also adds the Young Offenders Act 1997 diversion hierarchy (a required dot point the notes underplayed) and the current "raise the age" status. If you refine anything, edit the study/review page (the content source) and re-derive the deck.
Rose Bay Secondary College · HSC Legal Studies · Crime — Chapter 5 teacher lesson plan · NESA Stage 6 (2009) · HSC 2026