Founded Deadly Science, which educates and empowers Aboriginal communities with science resources, mentorship
Kamilaroi man Corey Tutt has won the NSW Young Australian of the Year Award, being recognised for his work in bringing much-needed science books, equipment, and mentorship to Aboriginal communities around the nation.
Deadly Science, which Tutt founded and operates without any staff, has brought 5200 books, and over 90 telescopes and foldscopes (paper microscopes) to kids in 97 communities across the country.
The books include Australia's First Naturalists: Indigenous Peoples’ Contribution to Early Zoology, and Bruce Pascoe’s Dark Emu, which details the complex agriculture systems of Indigenous Australians observed by early English explorers, shedding ‘hunter-gatherer’ myths.
High-profile Australian scientists including astrophysicist Professor Lisa Harvey-Smith, Australia’s Women in Stem Ambassador, Nobel Laureate Brian Cox, and Karl Kruszelnicki, have also donated books to Deadly Science.
Tutt notes that when engaging young people with science experiments, tapping into their natural curiosity, surveys have shown an attendance boost in STEM classes of 25 per cent.
For Tutt, it is about empowering young Aboriginal kids, and Australia as a whole to be proud of its 65,000+ years of science.
As he notes, “Aboriginal people were the first scientists, with tens of thousands of years of trial and error. The gap is not in knowledge, it is in resources.”
The problems that Aboriginal kids face in isolated communities are multifaceted: intergenerational trauma, a lack of opportunity, resources, access to fresh food, and the health and developmental issues that come alongside it.
“Kids go to school, and there are only 15 books there. It is horrible. People are unaware of the poverty that exists in Australia,” explains Tutt.
For Tutt, the long-term goal is to see the kids being mentored end up in University, and eventually take over from him in leading Deadly Science.
Deadly Science also raises money for smart gardens through the selling of t-shirts, which allow Indigenous Australian communities to grow their own food cost-effectively.
“A cabbage costs $22 in a community. You cannot expect young people to learn and eat properly when sugar is cheaper than fresh food. We want to make food cheaper, and teach kids to grow it,” explains Tutt.
“We want to help kids through school, and be a support network to get them in university.
“I want to empower people to take control of their own destiny, we often get narratives placed on us that act as limitations, and we do not give ourselves credit at times with how bright we are.
Tutt has also recently been made a member of the Equity Committee for Science and Technology Australia, advocating for Indigenous science.
As he explains, “I do not have an academic science background but have worked in STEM for a number of years, but it is a real achievement for someone like me. I have been an advocate for Aboriginal rights for all of my life, and it is good to get traction.
“The Australian of the Year Award is great, but it is a reflection of everyone I work with, and the community of people. It is a collaborative effort.”