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Dear Parents and Carers
The recent relaxation of COVID restrictions has seen the reintroduction of several routines which had been absent from school life for some time. One such routine is our Morning Assembly which is held each morning before the children enter the building to begin lessons. The assembly begins with a Welcome to Country followed by a Morning Prayer which is led by our Year Six children. It includes an acknowledgement of the day’s birthdays and general announcements.
Morning Assembly was reintroduced on Monday morning in beautiful Autumnal weather.
Mother’s Day Breakfast
A reminder that a breakfast for our mothers will be served from 7.30am on Friday morning in our Junior Playground. I understand many of our parents have felt quite dislocated from our school community during the Pandemic. It is for this reason that we have moved so quickly once Restrictions were eased to hold a function to enable parents to gather and enjoy each other’s company once again.
Our 50th anniversary Committee will be holding a special fundraiser on the morning. All profits will be put towards reducing the price of tickets for our Anniversary dinner in September.
Egg and bacon rolls will be served by our staff for mothers and children. The morning will conclude at 8.30am with a blessing for all mothers.
Please bring some gold coins as a donation to help defray costs.
Enrolment Period
We are now approaching the mid-point of the Official Enrolment Period and as such I would like to remind our current families that it is important to submit your application as soon as possible. I would be grateful if you could pass this message onto anyone who is considering enrolling their child into our 2023 cohort at St Matthew’s.
Next Wednesday our school will be open to any prospective families for a tour and Information session. Tours will begin at 5.00pm with the Information Session following.
The enrolment application link is included for your convenience: https://cg.catholic.edu.au/parents/enrolment/
Election Day Barbeque
Once again, our school will be used as a Polling Booth on Election Day. In past years our parent community has hosted a barbeque which has been a great money spinner for our school. If you are interested in coordinating the Barbeque on the day, please contact me. Once we have a Coordinator, we will arrange a roster of volunteers.
Finally happy Mother’s Day to all our mothers on Sunday.
May God bless you and your families
Graham Pollard
Principal
Conceptual Inquiry at St Matthew’s
During the holidays, did your child try out different things and learn in new and exciting ways? Did they ask questions? Were they at all curious about something? Did they learn independently, even for a short time, or explore topics they were interested in? If you answered: ‘Yes!’, then your child is an inquirer - something to celebrate!‘Inquiry teaching and learning’ is a term that is often used, incorrectly, to describe any approach or activity that is child-centred, or that provides students with choice. However, inquiry is much more than that. Inquiry is a way of teaching that promotes joyful curiosity, and transferable skills, framed by authentic contexts and real-life problems and purposes. Sounds exciting, doesn’t it?
Over the past two years, teachers at St Matthew’s have undertaken professional learning in the area of conceptual inquiry. Our goals were to explore frameworks that support inquiry learning, and to create concept-based units of work that emphasise big ideas and cross-disciplinary learning. We’ve also developed a teaching and learning framework for inquiry – a document that serves as a blueprint for our philosophy – as well as a draft program of inquiry for the school. As a group of adult learners, we’ve come to appreciate the values that underpin inquiry: agency, curiosity, equity, relationships, and growth. And all of this during a pandemic!Over the last seven weeks, these are the units of inquiry our students have investigated:
- The Earth's natural cycles influence the activity of living things
- Humans make choices that affect the survival of native animals.
- Understanding how living things change helps us to preserve and protect the natural environment
- Knowledge about and connection to living things and their environment allows us to understand and care for them.
- Human activity has an impact on changing landscapes.
- Adaptations help living things to survive and thrive in their environment.
- Communities collaborate to manage challenges.
On Friday, our students will hold their in-house Exhibition, presenting their most recent inquiry to their cohort peers in their classrooms. In the future, we hope to be able to invite parents along. In the meantime, you might like to ask your child to describe their learning journey for you at home.
Regular whole-school communication is available to parents on the following platforms:
- St Matthew’s Primary School Website, which is regularly updated
- Weekly newsletter
- Compass: Notes to parents are now sent via Compass. This includes excursion notes and updates about important and emerging developments in the school.
- Morning and Award assemblies
- Meet the Teacher evenings in Term 1
- Semester Reports sent home to parents at the end of Term 2 and Term 4.
- Parent Teacher Interviews in the middle of the year and at the end of Term 4 by request
- Open Evenings and Days
- And other opportunities when COVID-19 safety protocols allow
Parents are encouraged to contact teachers should they wish to discuss any pressing issues. In most instances, the classroom teacher is the first contact. For urgent matters, parents should call or email the front office.
While our school community values face-to-face meetings and telephone conversations, we acknowledge that email is the most effective form of communication for non-urgent matters and queries. Staff are unable to read and respond to emails during teaching time, and are discouraged from answering work emails outside of normal working hours (ie 8.30am to 5pm). You can expect that your email will be responded to within 48 hours.
We ask that you email teachers, or contact the front office, to make appointments for face-to-face or telephone meetings. Unscheduled meetings before or after school are strongly discouraged as teachers plan and prepare lessons and attend meetings at these times.
Issues related to other students or parents in the school should be brought to the attention of the school and not dealt with directly by parents.
If parents would like to make a complaint, they are encouraged to discuss the issue with the classroom teacher or school Principal in the first instance, depending on the nature of the complaint. If it is not possible to have a conversation, an email is also acceptable, and will generally be followed up with a phone call or meeting. Many issues can be resolved quickly through discussion.
Translators Needed
We are blessed to have a school community represented by so many different nationalities and languages. There are many families in our community who are still learning English and would benefit from having key information and messages translated in their home language for parish and school newsletters, notes home, and social media. For this voluntary position, you’d only be called upon a few times a year to help, and you wouldn’t need to translate much more that a short paragraph.
If you think you’d be able to translate a few sentences for us in Punjabi, Hindi, Nepali, or any other language that you know is spoken by families in our school, please get in touch with Petra Cole, our Assistant Principal (petra.cole@cg.catholic.edu.au) who will put your name down in our register of valued volunteers!
Petra Cole
Assistant Principal
Welcome back to Term 2. I am very excited to be back at school after 12 months of Maternity Leave with my son, George. It has been lovely to see all the students and their families again. Last week the Sacramental Team began working with Year 6 students and their families to prepare for the Sacrament of Confirmation. Please keep these students and their families in your prayers as we continue to prepare.
Sunday 8 May Gospel Reflection John 10:27-30
The fourth Sunday of Easter is also called Good Shepherd Sunday. The image of Jesus as Good Shepherd and the community of followers as his sheep has endured over the centuries as a primary image in our faith tradition. Its power to describe the relationship between Jesus and his followers transcends direct experience with sheep. The image speaks to us about the protection, security, and care that shepherds represent for their sheep
Family Connection
Not only can we recognize family members' voices, but we can also read the tone of their voices and know something about how they are feeling. In our relationship with Jesus, we know Jesus' voice and are called to follow just like sheep. Jesus doesn't just bring us closer to the Father, Jesus puts us directly into contact with God the Father, removing all distance between us. In the Gospel of John, Jesus identifies so closely with the Father that he tells us that they are one—not just close, but actually one. Knowing Jesus means knowing the Father.
Read with your family John’s Gospel, 10:27-30. Ask your family members to talk about some ways that Jesus brings them closer to God and closer to one another. Pray together
O my God, I love you with my whole heart, because you are all good and worthy of all my love. I love my neighbour as myself for the love of you. I forgive all who have injured me, and I ask pardon of those whom I have injured.
Amen.
Louisa Mitchell
Religous Education Co-ordinator
Our library looks a little different this term – the Year 5s are using the library space for their classrooms while the building renovations are happening. This means that students are not visiting our library weekly for lessons and borrowing. However, each class has a large class library that they can borrow from. While borrowing physical books from our school library isn’t as easy this term, e-books can still be borrowed from the SORA app. Please let me know if you are unsure how to access this. Also, I strongly encourage you to become members at your local public library, if you aren’t already. This will give you and your family access to many wonderful books.
As borrowing is different this term, we are encouraging students to return books from last term as soon as possible. If you have been receiving overdue notices for your child, please return these books to the library. Students can return their books to the library any day of the week.
Issue 3 of the Scholastic Book Club has been sent home this week. Please note that orders are due by Wednesday May 11th.
Sally Judd
Librarian
Webinar: Encouraging good behaviour
Presented by Dr Justin Coulson
8 June 2022 8:00pm AEST
Discipline is one of the most confusing and challenging topics that parents grapple with. When you look up the word discipline in the dictionary, the first definition is “punishment”. But this is a relatively new way of understanding the word. Until a couple of hundred years ago, to be disciplined meant to be shown a way to follow. This webinar, presented by Dr Justin Coulson is for every parent who has ever been so desperate to get their kids to ‘behave’ that they’ve tried Triple P, Super-Nanny, 1-2-3 Magic, and pretty much everything else out there, and still found themselves stuck. It explores the concept of discipline and how parents can encourage good behaviour in children.
Key learning and discussion points include:
- why the centuries-old strategies we still cling to should be left in the past
- how we get discipline wrong and why
- real world examples of discipline that are as imperfect as parents and their kids, but that still work
- ideas for discipline that turn everything you thought you knew about the topic on its head
- applicable strategies for everyone
St Matthew’s has special access to a voucher that can be redeemed for this webinar, which is delivered by Parenting Ideas.
The voucher code for this webinar is ENCOURAGE and can be used by you in the Parenting Ideas online shop, where the webinars are sold. The voucher will reduce the webinar cost to $0 at the checkout.
Watch from any device, any location
See the experts as they speak
Catch up recording available anytime
Dr Justin Coulson writes and speaks about parenting and family – because nothing matters more. Justin returned to full time study in his late twenties where he earned first class honours and a subsequent PhD in Psychology so that he could learn how to be a better husband and father. Now the focus of his life is his family and helping other families flourish – in that order. He lives with his wife and six daughters in Brisbane, Queensland.
Justin has written six books and is a four-time bestselling author. He is an occasional columnist for the New York Times and appears regularly in all of Australia’s major news outlets for television, radio, and print. He has built an enviable reputation as a parenting educator of the last decade, but he is perhaps best known as the parenting expert in Channel Nine’s reality show, Parental Guidance.
All families have received their log in details via email for our Compass Parent Portal. The Compass Parent Portal is an online portal that allows you to interact with the school and access up-to-date information. Once you have your log-in credentials and download the app, you’ll be able to:
- Enter absence notes for your child
- Give consent for excursions
- View school reports
- Communicate with your child’s teacher
- Receive communication from staff
If you didn’t receive log in details, please contact our Front Office (office.stmatts@cg.catholic.edu.au) or check your “junk” mailbox.
Click here to install Compass on Apple devices
Click here to install Compass on Android devices
When prompted: Search “St Matthew’s P” and then you’ll see “St Matthew’s Primary School – Page” as a drop down.
Happy birthday wishes to Grace B, William M, Evelyn C, Oscar C, Katie H, Flynn R, Mason A, Max S, Sienna F, Abigal C, Sitti A, Suhaavi K, Ty B, Jack F, Cody D, LAura W, Annabelle F, Matthew G, Laura P who celebrated birthday's in the holidays and Nathan F, Dailen B, Anna C, Millicent F, Liam C, Alba-Maria O, Chidiamara O, Nicholas M, who recently celebrated birthdays.