26 June 2015 issue 18
Transcription
26 June 2015 issue 18
Issue 18 26 June 2015 Tēnā Koutou Katoa I have been really impressed in the manner in which our students have maintained their effort throughout the last few weeks. Whilst the weather outside has been bitterly cold, our classrooms have remained lovely and warm. As I pointed out to our Year 9 and 10 students at assembly on Tuesday, ‘these are ideal learning conditions!’! What better place to be than a nice warm classroom. Our Year 7-10 students will have received their reports last Friday and I trust they have provided parents and caregivers with an accurate reflection on where they are at with their learning thus far. Year 7 and 8 teachers held their Student Led Conferences on Thursday and it was really pleasing to see such a widespread attendance. Thank you. The opportunity to discuss the Year 9-13 student reports, (and any other issue you may have), with teachers is on Monday evening. I look forward to seeing a similar turn out. I believe it is really important that parents and caregivers maintain a keen interest in their child's education throughout these important years. I would like to thank our college community for once again supporting our annual Work Day. It is a significant fund raising opportunity that allows our Student Council to make decisions on how we can possibly further resource our school. The success of the Work Day relies on both the cooperation of local businesses and employers, as well as the willingness of our students to work. There is no substitute for a good work ethic and I hope plenty of students rolled their sleeves up and really earned their money. As we brace ourselves for another cold week, spare a thought for our World Challenge participants who are about to depart for a trip of a lifetime to Kenya and Tanzania. I wish both groups all the very best. I am sure they will make the most of this incredible opportunity and I look forward to hearing about their experiences upon their return. Safe travels. Regards Dave Hunter Building Progress Key Dates 26 June 28 June 29 June 30 June 1 July 2 July 3 July Senior Reports Issued World Challenge Group 1 leaves for Africa Parent Interviews Night World Challenge Group 2 leave for Africa L1 SCP University Visit L1 PAH Tramp Learning Readiness Issued End of Term 2 20 July 21 July Start of Term 3 Friends of Taieri College Meeting 7pm. Meeting room beside reception. Year 6 Tournament Year 12/13 Drama Trip Toitu Year 7/8 Football vs Balmacewen Taieri College Open Day 23 July 24 July 26 July Kitchen Gardens Working Well Over the last 18 months we have established three raised boxes to grow vegetables and herbs for the Food Technology rooms. Both the teachers and students are enjoying being able to go and collect food from just out the door. Last year, with the help of interested people and grants from the DCC Enviroschools funds we were able to purchase a worm farm. Now, thanks to help from the Friends of the Taieri, and from the School Student Council, we have been able to purchase a composting bin so our circle is now complete. We can grow vegetables and then recycle plants that are finished so students are learning a lot about where their food comes from and how we can recycle and reuse, not waste food – the concept of sustainability is being introduced here. Even our new seedlings are being grown on-site thanks to Mr Whaley and his students. Thank you very much to all those involved in this very successful venture. Cell Phones/Electronic Devices A reminder to parents about our procedures should your son or daughter have their mobile device removed by a teacher for inappropriate or unwanted use in class. The mobile device is placed in a locked cupboard in the office and is returned to a parent or caregiver (not the student) after they have spoken to the Deputy Principal. NZQA Fees Year 11-13 Students This fee of $76.70 is due to be paid to College Office by 28 August 2015. If you receive a Work and Income or Study Link benefit, or have (or are entitled to) a Community Services Card, you can apply for financial assistance on a form available from the College Office. The NZQA fee would then reduce to $20.00. Students who applied last year will already have received a form. These should be returned to the College Office, as soon as possible, so we can apply the correct amount to your College account. Year 7 GATE Trip to the Ecosanctuary The Orokonui Ecosanctuary is located on Blueskin Road, Dunedin where it is a safe place for some of New Zealand’s native animals to live. When we went to Orokonui we investigated many small animals in the stream. Tahu (from the Ecosanctuary) gave us all charts with aquatic animals to identify. The chart also told us how clean the water had to be for them to survive. Then we went to the stream with the nets and scooped up some creatures and identified them. We discovered that the water level was 7/ 10 for cleanliness. Overall we think we saw about 13 different types of animals including eels, gecko, takahe, frogs, skinks and many more fascinating creatures. The animals at the Ecosanctuary are all native to New Zealand so that makes the sanctuary a great place to visit if you are interested in learning about New Zealand’s beautiful native animals. By Laura Gale 7CY CAREERS INFORMATION Careers Advisor – Sue Craigie: (03) 489 3823 ext 139 [email protected] School of Physical Education, Sport and Exercise Sciences – look inside! Friday evening 10 July 6 – 8pm and Saturday afternoon 11 July 1 – 4pm Friday evening: Come and find out more about the research done in the school: There will be short talks by research students and their supervisors. • Ken Hodge and Adam Miles (psychology of sport) • Doug Booth and Lisa Bavington (politics of sex testing) • Lynn Jones and Zara Taylor (Expinkt programme) followed by supper and conversations based around the talks. Saturday afternoon: Come and find out about the teaching done in the School: Dance and activity workshops a guided tour of the research and teaching labs followed by Q & A about the programme, admission and enrolment. Check the website for more details: physed.otago.ac.nz To let us know you are coming or to find out more, please email [email protected] Study at Victoria Open Day Victoria University’s main open day for prospective students is on Friday 28 August 2015. Year 12 and 13 students, as well as their parents, caregivers and whānau are invited to this important event. Study at Victoria Open Day is an informative and fun day for any student who is considering attending Victoria University of Wellington. The programme includes: · · · · · over sixty 40 minute subject information sessions expo displays from our faculties, schools and student services tours of our campuses and halls of residence opportunities to talk with current students and staff special information sessions for parents If you are interested in attending, please pick up a registration form from the Careers Office. You need to register by 24 July. News From The Commerce Department Year 11 Economics students made a fieldtrip to Cadbury World recently to observe the way natural resources (milk, cocoa, and sugar) are transformed in the factory’s production process into a finished good, such as a marshmallow Easter egg, ready for the retail market. But it’s not all chocolate showers, free samples and the chance to buy up large in the gift shop at the end of the tour. The students were in fact gathering research data for two of their internally assessed Achievement Standards, worth a total of 8 NCEA credits. The bad news that our guides told us was that Cadbury World is shortly going to stop doing the factory tours (the Dunedin site is the last Cadbury factory in the world still open to the public). If any readers know of another factory in Mosgiel or the city which would be prepared to host a group of Year 11 Economics students in future years so that they can observe its production process, please let the Commerce Department staff know. The Commerce Department would also like to hear from any Mosgiel wholesale or retail business which would be willing to show its Inventory recording system to a small group of Year 12 Accounting students. This would let the students supplement their text and workbook study of Inventory accounting sub-systems in preparation for an internally assessed NCEA Achievement Standard. Another very popular Commerce Department activity is the annual blind taste-testing sessions conducted with Year 10 Economists. This is one of several ways in which research methods are introduced to the students. This year the two classes produced different results. Tasting blind, the biggest cluster in Mr McDonald’s class preferred the taste of Schweppes while the majority of Mr Baines’ group liked Sprite. Both classes said that if they were shopping they would buy Sprite then Schweppes with a home brand as the least preferred option. However, when asked to identify what they had been drinking the great majority of Mr McDonald’s class could not correctly distinguish the Schweppes sample from the Sprite one. This was not the case with Mr Baines’ class, almost half of whom could distinguish the tastes correctly. In both cases, the majority of students could correctly identify which sample was the home brand. Turning to potato crisps, in both classes the students were fairly evenly split in their blind preference for the taste of Bluebird or Eta crisps. Both groups reported that the home brand crisps were too salty. If shopping both classes would have bought Bluebird before Eta and then the home brand. The majority of Mr McDonald’s class could match the taste to the brand correctly but most of Mr Baines’ class had the taste of Bluebird and Eta reversed. Most in both classes could correctly tell the taste of the home brand. So the value for money, wise buying lesson for a Year 10 student holding a party? In the case of lemonade for Mr McDonald’s group and chips for Mr Baines’ group, buy whichever name brand is on special and tell your friends it’s the one they like, safe in the knowledge that most of them won’t be able to tell the difference! Commerce Department staff were delighted recently with a visit to the school by two former students, Mel Warhust and Julia Gorinski, who were here as Tertiary Ambassadors for the University of Otago, where Mel is majoring in Marketing and Management and Julia in Accounting and Finance. They spoke with our Year 13 students looking to commence Commerce studies at the University next year. One clear message they had for the students was the advantage that taking Economics, Accounting and Maths in Year 13 gives students in their first year of tertiary Commerce studies. They also brought news of other former students of the Taieri College Commerce Department. Since the school was established at least six accountants have graduated and gone into private practice in Dunedin and elsewhere in the country and the world. An Economics graduate is now a Senior Policy Analyst at the Reserve Bank. There are at least two lawyers and one of the city’s top commercial real estate agents. Others have entered professions as diverse as computing, aviation psychology and dentistry. Among the entrepreneurial students who did not go on to university are the co-founder of one of the city’s most successful recent coffee bar start-ups and another who has recently added a second store to her coffee bar franchise. Mr McDonald, Mr Campbell and Mr Baines are always interested in learning of the successful post-school exploits of their former students and look forward to meeting many of them again at the school’s upcoming 150 th anniversary celebrations. Taieri College It has been two years in the preparation but the Taieri College World Challenge trips to Africa are about to depart. 21 students and their awesome parents have spent many long hours running firewood raffles and sausage sizzles as well as organising kitchen tours, quiz nights and car washes to raise the $9600 each student required. The practice walks, multi day tramps and training camps are over. The vaccinations are done and the visas are sorted. This Sunday, 28th June, the first team of 10 students and 2 teachers depart, followed by a second team of 11 students and another two teachers on Tuesday. Our destinations are Kenya and Tanzania. What are we doing there? Hopefully enjoying some warmer weather!! The first week we will tramp on two shorter tramps to acclimatise before embarking on our five day trek. One group will trek through the famous Masi Mara Reserve while the other team will trek to a height of 4000m to take in views of the Kenyan Rift Valley from the Abadere Mountains. The next week will be spent working on our projects. Both groups are excited about doing voluntary work and helping at different Kenyan schools. We will visit the ‘Njoro Salvation Army Special School’ for Disabled Children and the ‘Manga Ensoko Academy’. We will be building classrooms, painting, plastering and repairing run down older classrooms and organising activities for the children at each school. The final part of our month long journey is some R & R. We get to choose what we do in this part of our trip and both groups have voted to go on an overnight safari in Ngorongoro, Tanzania. The last few days will be spent on Zanzibar, The Spice Island. Snorkelling and relaxing will be the plan before the long flight back home to Mosgiel. We would like to thank everyone who has supported our fundraising ventures, it is hugely appreciated by all of us. Team A’s Facebook Page can be found at - https://www.facebook.com/TCWC2015A Sport Happenings This will be the last entry for the term. Remember that final order for the year for hoodies and basketball tops closes on Wednesday next week. Blow your own trumpet students!! While we in the sport office know most things that happen in the sport world we certainly do not know everything! So if you have made a representative team; travelling to a tournament over the holidays or have done anything you are proud of to do with sport, come and tell us about it. We want to share your news. Good luck for the final games of sport leading up to the holidays especially our netball teams who are travelling to Christchurch to defend the title they won last year. We are all cheering for you as well as our miniball team, who are going to a tournament in Oamaru for the first time. Just remember while it is good to have a rest over the holidays, it is important to not let your personal fitness drop as it is hard to pick it up again next term, so do a little running, go to the gym as well as hanging out by the fire. Your body with thank you for it. This week our students from Year 9 and 10 have been going back to their previous primary schools and coaching for the up and coming Year 6 tournament next term. (Photographs below). Important Date for next term 15 August is the Sport Council Social. Details will follow next term, but in order for us to give all the money we do give to support our teams, we need you to come along have a good time and support us as we raise money. It is a Pre Rugby World Cup Social so dress up as your favourite team, watch the game on the big screen then dance the night away. We have it all covered. So get a group organised and watch this space. Year 6 Coaching We have 8 left… The 2014 | 2015 Entertainment™ Book has expired!!!! Receive your new Book now OR ORDER AN ONLINE VERSION AND RECEIVE REGULAR UPDATES These are for sale for $60. Purchase these online or email [email protected] If paying through the college office we can only receive cash or cheque. Digital books now available. One ‘book’ can be loaded on to several phones to share amongst your family. Order your Entertainment Book now https://www.entbook.co.nz/orderbooks/26016x0