Student Newsletter - Southern Cross Distance Education
Transcription
Student Newsletter - Southern Cross Distance Education
Southern Cross School Distance Education Student Newsletter 2-40 Chickiba Drive, East Ballina NSW 2478 T 02 6681 0300 F 02 6681 0499 E [email protected] W sthcrossc-d.schools.nsw.edu.au Monday 24th August 2015 Issue 11 Focus on Faculty—History History faculty news Includes: Things remain very busy in the History faculty as we continue to expand with the appointment of two new permanent staff last term. The days our staff work and their phone extensions can be found below. With lots of visits and projects underway, email is often the best way to contact us. Name Miss Tonkin HT Ms Magriplis Mrs Commens Ms Yong Mr Walters Ms Barbour Ms Sheldon Phone ext 421 422 422 409 420 423 420 Student Calendar Please see back page for Student calendar KLA specialist days Visits from Transition and Stage Advisors to Centres to assist Year 10 students to chose subjects for year 11 in 2016. Preliminary Exam dates Link to HSC Examination Timetable Subjects taught this year Current working days Did you know that you can make payments to SCSDE online? Year 10 and Modern History Monday–Friday Year 8 and Ancient History Monday and Friday Years 9 and 10 History; Elective History Tuesday and Thursday Years 8 and 9 History; Ancient and Modern History Monday–Friday Elective History and Ancient History Thursdays We have launched a new online payment portal linked to our school’s website to make it easier for you to pay for school related payments. This is a secure payment page hosted by Westpac. What expenses can be paid online? Voluntary School Contributions, Subject Contributions, Excursions, Sport, Creative and Practical Arts, Sales to Students. How? Log onto School site at Years 7, 9 and 10 History Monday–Friday Years 9 and 10 History Monday– Wednesday We are continuing to develop new learning materials for the Australian Curriculum, working on finishing topics for Years 8 and 10 this semester. In History you will use a variety of multimedia: lots of audio recordings and videos so it’s very important you advise your teacher as soon as possible if your USB or equipment isn’t working as you can’t complete your work without these resources. Continued on next page…. Our school stands proudly on Bundjalung land 1 http://www.sthcrosscd.schools.nsw.edu.au Click on “Make a Payment” and follow the prompts to make a payment via Visa or MasterCard. Mailroom Information The following important information has recently been posted to students: Webpage information sheet Years 7 and 9 NAPLAN results Preliminary Exams The History faculty attempts to individualise our teaching and learning programs to suit the needs of individual students, so it’s important you: • carefully read your red title pages—these instructions are tailored to suit your ability and preferences—only send back the exercises listed • complete all activities and check them yourself—this helps you to know whether or not you are understanding the topic—NEVER send these back • stay in regular contact with your teacher—let them know the tasks you like, those you don’t and those you find hard or too easy • NEVER send back the learning material—keep it at home so you can refer back to it as you need—remember learning is building on your prior knowledge. With all the work we are doing revising the curriculum, the student and supervisor evaluations at the end of each unit are vital as your feedback helps us make improvements to learning. Please make sure you always return the evaluation of each topic to your History teacher. We hope you enjoy learning a little more about the History faculty in this newsletter. If you have any questions about the History courses or studying History please email or call us. Stage 4 History (Years 7 and 8) Students in Year 8, our budding historians have been studying the medieval world of the Vikings. Movies like Thor and How to train your dragon have revived interest in Viking society and it was great to see students enthusiastically complete the new unit in Semester 1. Some examples of their fantastic work designing Viking shields can be seen below. Students in Year 7 learn the skills of an historian and discover the ancient past, moving across diverse cultures and histories. From Ancient Australia, Greece, Egypt and China, Year 7 students learn about the mysteries of history. Our students have travelled back in time to learn about Lake Mungo and the people who lived there 40 000 years ago. Using their developing history skills, students have been learning how to use evidence and sources to discover what life was like in this site of cultural significance. Casey Ellis Isabella Smith Jamin Booth Lakota Perry Students in Year 8 have also been working on a virtual site study of Angkor in Cambodia. Their assessment task has been to produce a tourist guide for either Angkor Thom, Angkor Wat or Ta Prohm. Students were given a range of ways to present their guide and it’s been exciting to see the work that has been created. The Diprotodon looked like a huge wombat and lived around Lake Mungo before it became extinct about 25 000 years ago. 2 Stage 5 History (Years 9 and 10) Students in Year 9 have been studying the unit of work ‘Making a nation’, which looks at Australia’s federation. Their assessment task last term gave them an opportunity to choose a particular topic they were interested in from the time period to create a public awareness campaign via a social media site. Students chose topics such as immigration, women’s and Aboriginal Peoples’ rights to vote and issues surrounding federation. Using their creativity on platforms such as Facebook, Fakebook, Instagram and Edmodo they were able to display their understanding in a variety of ways in a medium that is relevant to their everyday lives. Some of Kyia Butler’s clever Facebook posts on women’s voting rights can be seen below. Students in Year 10 this semester have been doing their mandatory historical site study on the Snowy Mountains Hydro-electric Scheme and investigating the impact this engineering wonder had on the land and people of the area. Students undertook a virtual study of the site using videos, audio recordings, an interactive map, animation and photos and were able to deliver their findings in a variety of ways. 3 Senior History HSC Ancient and Modern History students are busily finishing their course work and should be revising their summaries and practising past exams as they prepare for the HSC exams early next term. Year 11 Ancient and Modern History students only have a few weeks to go before all their course work needs to be complete and they sit their Preliminary exams. All Year 11 and 12 students have been invited to our annual Senior History minischool on Monday 31 August which will help with their exam preparation. Students must make sure they RSVP as per the information below to assist with our organisation. History competitions There are a number of competitions History students can enter. The theme this year for the research based National History Challenge was ‘Leadership and Legacy’. Kirra Piper in Year 9 decided to take up the challenge and wrote an essay on John Flynn. For her, John Flynn epitomised the theme ‘Leadership and Legacy’ through his foundation of the Royal Flying Doctor Service. We wish Kirra all the best and hope she wins ones of the prizes on offer. The Hills Sports High School is hosting the 2015 History Mastermind Competition held on Friday 20 November. This competition consists of teams of four students from Years 7 and 8. The teams will be quizzed on topics such as: Ancient Greece, Egypt & Rome, Medieval Europe, current affairs and Aboriginal History to 1900. If you are interested in this competition please contact your History teacher for more details. 4 T Gifted and Talented he Gifted and Talented Team, at Southern Cross School Distance Education, showcases items created by students. If you have created or made something lately ie art, technology, invention, creative writing etc please contact Hedda Whitfield on 66 810 352 or email [email protected] - GATs Coordinator so that we can showcase your project. The following was written by one of our students. Steampunk anyone? Mara’s preface It was three o’clock in the morning, and she was this close to losing a finger. Dress ups were encountered, ideas were sparked, and attempted steampunk stories were written. Later I tried to fix it and it didn’t save so imam roll down to the bottom of the page where the drabbles are. Dear god. Dear god this is a god damned MESS ugh. Why do I write things at three in the goddamned morning, it’s just NOT a good idea. Ugggggggggggggh this pains me to read, it is hurting me deep in the heart. DEEP FUuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuughughblurghleblah I just hate this entire thing but I can’t delete it and I’m probably never going to properly edit it so that it ISN’T complete and utter rubbish. UGH. Chapter one “Name.”, the balding man behind the desk asked. The office was large, a long row of desks down the middle of the room. “Ellis Lander.”, he replied nervously, glancing to his left. He could see people dismantling odd machines before the man or woman behind the desk said something and they left, disappointed. “Age?”, the man continued, snapping his attention back to his own career. “Eighteen.”, he answered. “Alright, you have sixty seconds to fix this.”, he set one of the odd machines he’d seen on the other desks in front of him, pulling a stopwatch out of his pocket. “Ready?”, he nodded, picking up the odd machine. It looked sort of like a circular hairbrush, the same sort of bristles protruding from the upper half. “Go.” Ellis got to work, popping open a panel to reveal a set of cogs. The obvious problem was the way the cogs were arranged, a tangled jumble that would come apart if it was used. Keeping one eye on the cogs, he rearranged the cogs with nimble fingers, so that they spun smoothly, the bristled head of the device rotating. He frowned, something tickling his memory. It still wasn’t right, the device didn’t seem to be built for…whatever you would use a rotating hairbrush-like- device for. He turned the device over in his hands, noticing another smaller button beneath the one that rotated the head. The cogs it turned when pressed were functional, except for the fact one was missing, leaving the last cog to turn uselessly. He frowned, going back to the previously fixed panel of cogs. A few changes gave him a free cog to put in place of the missing one, not that he had any idea what the second button did. If it was what he thought it was, then it wasn’t like he had ever used one. “Time’s up, Mr Lander.” the man said as he put the device back together, reaching to take it from him. Pressing the first button, the spiked head wound up for a moment before he pressed the second button and it released. He nodded approvingly. “Very good Mr Lander, We’ll have you assigned to—“ “ME - I call dibs!”, a voice exclaimed from above. They both looked up in time to see one of the ceiling panels to swing open as two boots appeared, followed by stocking clad legs. 5 “Oh dear.”, the man sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose. A girl swiftly lowered herself down into the room by a golden chain attached to a large belt around her waist, landing deftly on her feet. She wasn’t much older than him, wearing a mirage of leather and gold’s and blacks, dark magenta hair standing out in stark contrast to those. Over her left eye she wore a plain black eye patch, making him wonder what was beneath it. Her uncovered eye was bright blue, like a clear sky on a summer’s day. “Good job, by the way. Most people just reckon that because it spins it works, without thinking of what it’s supposed to be for.”, she scowled, tugging the chain. It fell from the ceiling and neatly landed in her hand, a quiet whirring noise emitting from her belt as he realized the chain wasn’t attached to the belt, but came from somewhere inside it. The chain was drawn back into the belt as he watched, blinking. “My mom had one of those, I only managed it because I knew what it was.” he admitted, glancing down at the old fashioned hair curler. “Or, I thought I knew what it was.” “You’re modest, too. Half the idiots in here would already be bragging about how simple it was by now.” she grinned, completely ignoring his words in favour of sticking out one gloved hand. “Marissa Gates, though everyone calls me Mara.” He nodded uncertainly and shook her hand, feeling an odd mixture of happy, glad, hesitant and, if he was being honest, slightly frightened. He’d actually passed; he was going to work in this city. He thought about what he’d tell his worried mother and his sceptical father back home next time he wrote. At first light on my initial morning in the city, the sound of machinery was almost drowned out by the thuds of the crowd bustling about the slightly decrepit central park. Almost… the grinding of a thousand gears bigger than Ellis’ house was a hard thing to top. Despite the accommodation and the impossibly stuffy air, he was thrilled to be here. Gearstone, the capital city of Steam, was enough to make the overly packed streets and unbearable noise almost pleasant. “Sorry, sorry!” Ellis cried as someone once again knocked into him as he stopped dead to marvel at something or other. A lady gave him an offended look through layers of white foundation pasted on her round moon face, as she passed him by. Ellis’ papers only allowed him up to the tenth story, where the preliminary trials were being held. The air was clearer than the ground floor by miles, but it still held a distinct smell. The streets reeked of oil and there was a nigh permanent fog hanging about the thoroughfare. Trying to find his way through the hectic main road was like a salmon fighting its way upstream—suffocating, unpleasant and disorientating. Three times did he stop and ask for directions, and twice he was told to shove his head in a gutter. He had come to the city in hopes of learning to engineer the great mechanical masterpieces that dominated the skyline of the towering city of Gearstone. Ellis wasn’t alone in his ambition; the city was swarming with young hopefuls like him. It had been difficult to book room even months in advance. His room at the boarding house was on the lower levels, the ones that stank of grease and smoke. The room was tiny, a bed and a bathroom with the barest room to take two steps in between. It was to be expected on the meagre money he’d had to offer. The park was small, a brown-green square between crowded footpaths. What little sunlight made it past the crisscrossing bridges came in intermitted rays as the giant cogs across the sky blocked them like storm clouds? But there was only so much of the city he could take. The grass here was the slightly unhealthy colour the artificial sunlight from the circular lamps the trees were stunted, bent over things that skimmed Gearstone was a huge city; towers over fifty stories, each the size of a small town in itself, reaching into the sky. Maintained by some of the world’s most prestigious engineers, origin of some of the world’s most revelational inventions, home to some of the world’s richest and most famous. The Clockworks Corporation was a giant stone tower in the shape of a gear they said, if you were lucky enough to fly over it. From the ground, it just looked like a massive, jagged chunk of metal protruding out of the ground. Ellis couldn’t afford even the cheapest of blimps, the ones crowded with grubby tourists and the ominous wheezing where the engines should be. Instead, he waited in line on the dirt smattered roads leading into the city, trying to maintain a polite distance between the burly man before him and the harried mother with the crying child behind him. He could only examine the bronze automatons on either side of the elaborate portcullis for so long before boredom began to wear on him. This morning, he hadn’t even been able to see the city through the fog. Now, he could see the guard at the entrance stamped sheet after sheet of paper with a bored jerk of his bronze arm. Examining that and wondering at the mechanics of the prosthetic managed to occupy him a little longer. He almost didn’t notice when an expectant metal hand raised in a well-practiced motion. He did; however, blink at it for a long moment before remembering there was a world outside of two steps forward every minute. Then he hurried to supply his papers for stamping, before the harried mother with the crying child behind him did something drastic. The line to the apprenticeship office was long enough that he had plenty of time of wonder if he was wasting his time. If he made the cut, he’d assigned to someone to learn from and assist. He cued up with a hundred other applicants outside, on the long bridges that criss-crossed across each layer of the tall city. 6 7 8 9 Student Calendar 2015 Please note: Transition and Year Advisors are visiting centres to meet with Year 10 students re: subject choices for year 11 in 2016— Red text (Full time students only). KLA specialist days are in blue text. (Full time students only). Date Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Week 7 August 24 Maths and History at Coffs Harbourside and Textiles at Ballina 25 Maths and History at Grafton 26 Science at Glen Innes/Inverell (not at centre) and History at Mullumbimby 27 Science at Tenterfield (not at centre) Sport/PDHPE at Tweed PCYC 28 PDHPE at Lismore TAFE Week 8 August/ Sept 31 Maths at Ballina Senior History Mini School at SCSDE 1 Textiles at Casino, Sport/PDHPE at Mullumbimby 2 Mullumbimby and Yamba English at Mullumbimby, Visual Arts at Murwillumbah, Science at Grafton (not at Centre) 3 Tweed PCYC and Grafton Maths at Byron YAC, Science at Coffs Harbour (not at centre), Textiles at Lismore TAFE 4 Ballina and Toormina Maths at Tweed PCYC and History at Lismore TAFE Week 9 Sept 7 Casino and Coffs Harbour History at Mullumbimby, Visual Arts and Music at Ballina Preliminary Exams 8 Byron Bay and Coffs Harbour Wood tech at Mullumbimby, Sport/PDHPE at Casino Preliminary Exams 9 Murwillumbah and Woolgoolga Science at Mullumbimby and History at Murwillumbah Preliminary Exams 10 PDHPE at Byron YAC, Preliminary Exams 11 Preliminary Exams Week 10 Sept 14 PDHPE at Balllina Preliminary Exams 15 Tenterfield and Glen Innes English at Casino Preliminary Exams 16 Inverell Geography at Mullumbimby 17 Inverell History at Byron YAC 18 Science at Lismore TAFE and History at Tweed PCYC Last Day of Term 3 Holidays 21 22 23 24 24 Holidays 28 29 30 1 2 Week 1 5 Labour Day 6 7 First Day of Term 4 8 9 The Higher School Certificate starts on Monday 12th October and finishes on Wednesday 4th November. Please follow this link to the BOSTES website to view the HSC Timetable: http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/key_dates/pdf_doc/hsc_timetable_2015_web.pdf 10
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