- Goolwa Primary School
Transcription
- Goolwa Primary School
“Quality Education in a Caring Environment” Dear Parents and Caregivers, STAFF PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT Gardiner Street GOOLWA SA 5214 Telephone: 08 8555 2261 Fax: 08 8555 3899 Email: [email protected] Website: goolwaps.sa.edu.au On the Student Free Day staff attended a Professional Development session facilitated by Sandy Russo from SPELD (Specific Learning Difficulties). Sandy delivered a session on strategies to support students with learning difficulties. The two main areas discussed in the session were Dyslexia and Working Memory. She explained that Dyslexia is a learning difficulty that has a wide spectrum. It may have an effect on learning to read, spell and write. It may even have an impact on a child’s ability to develop mathematical skills. Each child is different and so is the degree of difficulty. A child may have only one area of difficulty. Dyslexia is not an intellectual disability, nor is it connected to sight. Many children and adults can have problems with Working Memory, but this does not mean they have Dyslexia, however sometimes they can have both. Due to this Sandy presented strategies and resources which can be used to support our students with their learning. She explained how important it is for students to learn strategies that will support them, as they move through to secondary school. We looked at what is available on the SPELD website that can be used by teachers, students and parents. It was an extremely informative session and we hope to have further sessions with SPELD to look at other areas of learning difficulties. One of the areas that a number of students have difficulty with is Working Memory. It is an area that is linked to the development of language at a very young age. Our DECD Speech Pathologist has provided us with a simple explanation on “WHAT IS WORKING MEMORY?”, and how we can support children through games. Please take some time to read the article further in this newsletter. You will see how easy it is, to fit some of these games into daily activities as a family. Look out for some more ideas on how to support your child in the next few newsletters. The afternoon session was run by Australian Curriculum Advisor, Jane Davies, who worked with staff on the initial stages of preparing a Whole School Literacy Agreement. It is anticipated the information collected will be collated next term, as we continue to frame this Agreement. LEARNING TAKES MANY FORMS JUNE 15 FOR YOUR DIARY… JUNE… No. 10 14 -16 Tree Planting 15 Governing Council Meeting 16 Pie Drive Orders DUE 20 SRC’s Parliament House 21 Port Adelaide Football Club visit 22 Kenmore Park Camp departs 23 Yr 6/7 Maritime Museum 24 Room 13/14 Farm Barn 27 Yr 6/7 State Library & Bounce 29 Room 6/7 Excursion 29 Yr 4/5 SAPSASA Basketball 30 Pie Drive orders arrive July 01 05 06 08 25 NAIDOC March Kenmore Park Camp returns Student Reports End of Term 2 Start Term 3 Both Julie Stevenson and myself attended a conference recently that looked at the benefits of allowing children to experience failure. By always being successful in what they do, there is no opportunity for the children to develop the skills to work through problems and work on alternative solutions. Mention was made of the skills needed in today’s workforce and problem solving is regarded very highly by employers. Of course, in a classroom environment, teachers are always supportive if they see a student has incorrectly completed a task, by using language along the lines of, “Can you think of another way to work this out?“ or “What might be another answer for this problem?” By always being supportive, a great deal can be learnt from making mistakes. Kind regards, Kym Palka Acting Principal Julie Stevenson Acting Deputy Principal Letitia Hayward Counsellor KENMORE PARK 7 sleeps to go Mr C-B, Isaac and Kate recently received swag for the Kenmore trip, donated from Wade and Sue Kruger of South Coast Marine and Caravan Upholstery. Thank you for your support. The countdown is well and truly on! Lots of nervous excitement is being felt as the Year 7’s get ready for their trip to Kenmore Park next week. Kenmore Park students will be visiting Kings Canyon, Uluru and Kata Tjuta along the way. Packing of bags and swag rolling practice is also happening. For many this is their longest trip away from their families and first camping trip, but a trip they have been looking forward to since starting school. An update of their adventures will be posted on the front office window each day. We wish everyone a very enjoyable and safe adventure!! PARENT NETWORK SAPSASA Pie Drive Fundraiser order forms and money must be returned to the front office by On Wednesday 1st June 2016, the Year 5/6/7 SAPSASA Netball Carnival girls teams travelled to Victor Harbor Netball Club, to compete against other schools along the Fleurieu Peninsula. On the day we played against Yankalilla, Investigator, Mt Compass, Victor Harbor Primary and Eastern Fleurieu. We had 16 enthusiastic girls, who had been busy training twice a day for several weeks. Goolwa Primary School was represented in Division 1 and 2. The girls were unfortunate not to win any games, but they came very close. All the girls showed great sportsmanship and determination throughout the day. Thursday 16th June. NO LATE ORDERS WILL BE ACCEPTED. Pies are baked with pride by Heritage Pies & Pastries and will be ready for collection at school on Thursday 30th June from 3 p.m. onwards. The money raised as part of this fundraiser will go towards purchasing new SAPSASA sports uniforms for the school. COLOURING ALPACAS SUCCESS The SAPSASA Squad for 2016: Becky, Ella, Hayley, Chontelle, Gabby, Kasey, Charlotte, Ebony, Jorja, Elouise, Makailla, Sabrina, Isis, Shakaya, Asha and Jessica. Thank you to the parents and families for supporting the girls and everyone who helped on the day. Special thanks to David Hamilton and Ashley Bald for umpiring, Sally Perry for scoring and Lauren and Anita for coaching. Students in our early year’s classes had an opportunity to participate in the art section of the Australian Alpaca Association of SA Colour Classic Show. The show was held from 13th-15th May at the Strathalbyn Harness Race Club. Each participating student completed a colouring sheet which featured two alpacas. In the 5 to under 6 year old section: Indiana received an ‘I love alpacas’ sticker. Matilda, Oliver, Bella, Ruby W and Indee received a SA Colour Classic ribbon. Dee received a SA Colour Classic Ribbon for 4th place. In the 6 to under 7 year old section: Kedan, Jade, Elizabeth and Oscar L received an ‘I love alpacas’ sticker. Erin, Urshuler, Ebony and Oscar Y received a SA Colour Classic ribbon. Callum M received a SA Colour Classic ribbon for 5th place. In the 7 and under 8 section: Justin, Caleb, Annabel, Nuala, Ella H, Natalie, Clarice, Summer and Django received an ‘I love alpacas’ sticker. Grace, Sarah, Chloe L, Amahlee, Mia N, Connor R, Chloe R, Rhett and Blair received a SA Colour Classic Ribbon. Jayden E received a SA Colour Classic Ribbon for 4th place. Demi received two ribbons – one SA Colour Classic Ribbon and one for SA Colour Classic Supreme Junior Art Exhibit. Thanks go to Ms Susan Haese for collecting the entries and then returning them to our school, so parents are able to see their child’s prize and entry. Thanks also to Kate and Isaac for presenting the students with their prize at JP News. The Goolwa Primary School football team travelled to the Encounter Bay Oval on Wednesday, June 1st for the annual Southern SAPSASA Football Carnival. Ten schools from the Southern SAPSASA District competed in a 14-side competition, with teams split into two pools of five teams each. Our team fought hard against some tough opposition, especially against some of the larger schools in the District, but unfortunately came away without a win. Some tenacious play from several players resulted in some good passages of play throughout the day. Well done to all the players for the way they represented the school at the carnival. LIVING SAFELY WITH PETS ROOM 6 & 7 EXCURSION The Responsible Pet Ownership Education Program on Friday 3rd June provided students with an excellent resource, for educating children about the responsibilities of pet ownership. Lisa with the aid of her Springer Spaniel, did an informative presentation with 6 classes in the school gym. During Week 7, students in Year 5 and 6 from Mr Weatherill and Mr Foote's classes went on another local environmental excursion. These are some comments made by our students: “Look down when a dog is angry.” By Rohan “Don’t be silly with dogs. You should be nice and don’t scare them. By Taeya “When a dog is angry be quiet as a mouse and put your arms on the side.” By Callum “When you’re walking past someone’s gate, don’t touch their gate.” By Dylan SCHOLASTIC BOOKCLUB Orders for Issue 4 are due back Friday 17th June Orders are expected to be delivered in the next few weeks. Any queries can be made through the front office. Students explored 500 year old Tea Trees and a marshland covered by Ruby Salt Bush. We learnt about the endangered Orange Bellied Parrot, which is more endangered than Panda Bears. Students were also shown a Golden Wattle Tree with malformed nuts. We learnt the nuts had the larvae of tiny native wasps growing inside them. When inspected, we could see the tiny white larvae inside. We are all looking forward to our next excursion, as part of the "Our Place" series, in Week 9. DISCO DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY “The Term 2 Disco was a success! Just like every disco. We thank all the staff members, the DJ, the Parent Network Group, Isaac, Chontelle and I (Kate) for all the hard work and effort we all put into making sure everyone had a great time. A big thank you to Mrs Hayward for organising absolutely everything, we couldn’t have done it without you. On the day we had a sausage sizzle with juice boxes, cupcakes and water. They were delicious. The balloons and lights inside were terrific and the children enjoyed themselves. So the overall experience was fun and the atmosphere was great.” By Katie. The iPads in Mr Kube’s class have been used on a daily basis for a variety of purposes by the Year 2/3 students. Students have been using apps to further their understanding of mapping. Spelling their list words, practising their mathematics and making movies are a few of the practical applications the students enjoy using. TREE PLANTING On Tuesday 14th June, the Year 6/7 classes went to the Old Goolwa Cemetery for a day of tree planting. The weather was fresh in the morning, but it warmed up to be a very pleasant day. Thankfully there was no sign of rain! There was a lot to do, so children, parents and teachers were quickly set to work folding tree guards and placing bamboo sticks through them. Following a quick refresher lesson on how to plant trees the right way, children were set to task raking away weeds, making holes, planting, placing tree guards and hammering in bamboo sticks. YEAR 6/7 EXCURSIONS While the majority of Year 7’s are away at Kenmore Park, the remaining Year 7’s and Year 6’s are planning a couple of excursions. Thursday 23rd June –Maritime Museum Port Adelaide. Monday 27th June – State Library and Bounce. Please note departs 8.45am sharp and return 3.30pm. Thursday 30th June – Marion Bowling and Aquatic Centres Monday 4th July – Monarto Zoo. Please remember to wear school uniform, bring morning tea, lunch and drinks. There was a huge range of natives to plant, including acacia’s, native grasses and ground covers such as Ruby Saltbush. By the end of the day, students had successfully planted 1000 trees! A fun day and a brilliant job assisting in the restoration of local habitats. Well done to all our year 6/7’s. PASTORAL SUPPORT WORKER COUNSELLOR NEWS Amy Nicholson, our Pastoral Support Worker (PSW), has undergone her first year review with an external panel. We have been delighted with her work with our community. Following are notes the staff and students have made about Amy’s contribution to the school. Does your child have a chance of being successful? Amy’s role is mostly appreciated, and is most beneficial to our school community in the following areas: 1:1 student well-being support, small group student well-being support, co-ordination of the Breakfast Club, supporting the “What’s the Buzz’ program, organising lunchtime activities, as a classroom support/presence, pastoral support for staff, support for families. Missing school 1 or 2 days a week doesn’t seem much but... What is the most significant change of difference in the school community you are aware of due to Amy being in the role? Amy’s student well-being support is certainly a strength. Her work with students who have been traumatised is to be commended, Amy has a supportive role to disadvantaged students, Amy has slipped into the role perfectly with very little disruption, Amy relates really well with the students, she is a trusted person in the school, the children can turn to, kids have an extra person to go to That equates to 20 days or Do you have any other comments you’d like to make? ‘Amy is an asset her calm, compassionate and insightfulness is inspirational’ If your child misses 1 day per fortnight 4 weeks per year Over 13 years of schooling that’s nearly 1.5 years If your child misses 1 day per week That equates to 40 days or 8 weeks per year Over 13 years of schooling that’s nearly ‘Amy, you are doing a great job’ 2.5 years ‘Goolwa PS are so lucky to have you’ ‘Great job Amy’ If your child misses 2 days per week Students Yrs R-7 What is good about having Amy at your school? ‘Amy is very kind to others and will never leave people out, she is helpful and caring and always willing to have a go.’ That equates to 80 days or ‘Amy is helpful because she is always there to listen or the lend a helping hand’ Over 13 years of schooling that’s more than 16 weeks per year 5 years ‘She helps with problems and is good to talk to’ ‘Amy helps everyone and helps with PALS (Play at lunchtime)’, If your child ‘She is a great helper and good to talk to’ ‘It is good to have a spare teacher to talk to when Mrs Hayward is busy’ misses 3 days per week That equates to 120 days or 24 weeks per year ‘She is amazing at solving problems’ ‘She helps you when you need help and if you are sad’, ‘She is very kind’ Is there anything else you would like to say about Amy? ‘Amy is a very nice teacher that will help students in need’ ‘Amy is a very respectful person and is fun to be around, it is an honour to have her at GPS’ ‘She is good to trust’ ‘She is an amazing help at GPS’ ‘She is kind, caring and most of all she is always trying to help’ ‘If you are sad, she calms and talks with you’ ‘She is kind and friendly to everyone in the whole school’ Over 13 years of schooling that’s nearly 8 years Being at Goolwa Primary School EVERY SINGLE DAY Counts and MAKES A DIFFERENCE!! WORKING MEMORY AND ORAL LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES Working memory is the short term memory that allows children to remember verbal and visual information long enough to use it for a given task (eg following an instruction, copying words from a whiteboard, remembering what happened in a story). Oral language is the language we use when we’re speaking, including the sentences we make (questions, simple statements, sentences joined by and/because, to explain etc), the grammar we use (tense, plurals, adjectives etc) and the vocabulary used. Good foundational oral language development is needed for students to become literate, as they need to be able to use and understand complex language in the oral form before they can use or understand it in a written form. Below are some strategies that can be used in daily activities or in games to help improve these areas of difficulty. Oral Language Activities Using pictures to tell a story To help your child understand that pictures are linked to the story, you can emphasise the pictures in whatever books you are reading at home. One way to encourage your child to tell his/her own stories is to show them a photo of themselves and ask him / her to tell you what happened in / before / after the photo was taken. Prompt your child to give you more detail with questions such as, “what happened next?”, “why did you do that?” or “how did that make you feel?” “Read” a favourite story that your child knows well using only the picture. Tell them that you will use the pictures to tell the story and point to the pictures as you tell it. After you’ve “read” a couple of pages ask your child to “read” a page using the pictures. Explaining game This is an easy dinner table / car trip activity that multiple people can play. Have one person think of an action / scenario (as simple / silly as you like) and then have someone else think of a reason for why it happened. Familiar concepts will be easier at first, things like “I ate my dinner”….”because I was hungry”, or “I went swimming”….”because I was hot”. Work up to harder more abstract reasoning like “the cat says woof” ….” because it was talking to a dog”. Policeman hat Either use a real or imaginary hat and make up a silly policeman voice. When your child makes a choice or a statement about preference (e.g. I don’t want to do that) put on the hat and voice and ask her to tell you why she made that choice. You could say something like “Police Constable Explainalot here, having identified a young person who hasn’t explained themselves. Excuse me Miss/Sir, why did you choose that?” If your child answers with something like “because I like it”, ask him/her why they like it, to try and elicit more detailed answers. Working Memory Activities Shopping If you’re shopping with your child, read a couple of items off the list and ask them to repeat them. For example “we need to buy apples and carrots, Silly me, I’ve forgotten – what did we need to buy?” Start with one item, and as your child improves remembering these, increase the number of items you tell him/her at once. Story reading Point to simple things in books and once you’ve turned the page, ask your child what they were. For example you could ask “what animal was on that last page?” or “what happened on the last page?” or “what was the man called?” etc. Simon Says This is a listening game where players have to listen to 2 (or more) bits of information. The leader (Simon) calls out a simple instruction (e.g. touch your toes), but players only do the action if the leader starts the instruction with “Simon says”. Therefore players need to listen to whether “Simon says” was said, and then the instruction afterwards. This can be made harder by adding two instructions, for example “Simon says touch your toes and clap”. I went to the zoo This is an easy game to play in the car. Players take it in turns to add information to a statement and must remember all the parts that came beforehand. The first person says, “I went to the zoo and I saw a tiger”. The second person says, “I went to the zoo and I saw a tiger and a snake”. And so on. Variations include: I went shopping and bought….. I went to the moon and I packed…… I went to the park and saw… Copy the sound Have different musical instruments (real or saucepan lids, rice in containers etc) on the floor and make a noise with one, get your child to repeat it. Increase this up to two, three, four and five sounds in a row as he/she is able. You can also make it harder by having him/her close her eyes and only listen to the sound, rather than being able to watch you touch the instruments. COMMUNITY NEWS 2016-2017 ENTERTAINMENT BOOKS ARE ON SALE $65 EACH AVAILABLE FROM THE FRONT OFFICE OR VISIT THE WEBSITE www.entbook.com.au/9g15 541 Funds raised through the sale of the book go towards supporting our annual Year 7 Cultural Exchange trip. SOUTHERN CROSS CULTURAL EXCHANGE Southern Cross Cultural Exchange is still URGENTLY trying to find families for the last 7 French students and 1 Italian student arriving on the 6th July. Can you please help? Host families do not need to have a child the same age to have a student, what we require is people with a kind heart and a willingness to help bring different cultures closer together. Anyone interested to know more could contact me on (08)83230973 or email me [email protected] Jenny Hanson, State Manager, Southern Cross Cultural Exchange