St Joseph's Catholic Primary School Wandal Newsletter

3 November 2021

Weekly Prayer Reflection

All Saints Day

Saints are an important part of Catholic life. Throughout the year, we remember and celebrate various men and women who have lived heroically good lives. They are placed before us as models and are to inspire us to believe that, with God on our side, we can be and do so much more than we thought. The problem many of us have with this is that these saints can appear too good to be true…and, therefore, remote from our lives.

Then along comes the Feast of All Saints, which we celebrated on Monday, 1 November. Sometimes it is said that it is for the unknown saints: the ones who didn’t make the official roll call. Yes, but there is more. I like to think it is also for the people I have known to be good and loving and generous in my life and who have inspired me with their heroism. High on the list is my grandparents but they are not alone. Departed friends, workmates, even people I have only known in passing and whose goodness is inspiring are ‘saints’ to me. They are still close, wanting to help, working for my good. The conversations I have with them are a form of prayer.

As we recall the ‘saints’ we have known and recognise how they are still with us, we are given the sense of belonging to a community of love who are wending their way towards the goal of life in God. These ‘saints’ want to help us. Let us name and rejoice in the goodness we have been given through them.

Loving God, I thank you for the good and loving people who have touched my life and who are now with you. Let me sense their presence and be inspired by their love. I ask this in Jesus’ name confident that you will hear me.

Sr Kym Harris osb

From the Principal

 Last week we welcomed  Mrs Eleanor Thomson to our staff group. Eleanor will be assisting students in Year Four until the end of the year, in Mrs Tickner's place. You are very welcome Eleanor!

Mrs Shirley Hopkins has asked me to pass on her thanks to the St Joseph’s Wandal community for your using your keytags at Drake’s Supermarket to assist with fundraising efforts for the Cathedral. Mrs Hopkins thanks you all for your efforts and wishes you all a wonderful 2022.

Parents & Friends Annual General Meeting

As parents of students enrolled at St Joseph’s Wandal, you are automatically part of our Parents and Friends Association. At the conclusion of this school year, a number of positions on our P and F Executive Committee will be vacated.  I am extending an invitation to you, to become more involved in your children’s school experience by attending our P and F meetings, or by putting your hand up to take on an Executive role in 2022.

Our P and F plan and organize fundraisers and events such as our High Tea, provide opportunities for parent engagement and socialising and determine how funds raised are spent in the school. When we have a substantial group, the workload is greatly reduced and the creative ideas are enhanced! 

If you feel this is something you may be interested in, please feel free to contact me at school, or just turn up to a meeting! Our Annual General Meeting will be held on Tuesday 9 November at 5.15pm in the staffroom (please note changed date and time).

During this meeting, as well as filling roles for 2022, we will also be discussing organisational aspects of the upcoming Christmas concert and breakup, which may be an opportunity for you to ‘test the waters’ and offer assistance. 

Classes for 2022

*Response is required by every family to ensure your continued enrolment here next year*

So far we have received 140 responses out of 350 students.

It is hard to believe that we are already busily planning for the 2022 school year. Our Confirmation of Enrolments forms are now accessible via Parent Lounge. We require EVERY family in the school to complete this form, to confirm your children's enrolment here in 2022.  Even if you plan on leaving St Joseph’s at the end of the school year (Year 6 students excluded), please complete the forms at your earliest convenience so that we can commence our preparations for classes in 2022.

We have waiting lists for most of our classes, so please let us know if you will not be returning in 2022.

Staffing for 2022 is not yet finalised and teachers will not be appointed to classes until the very end of term (at the earliest).  We send out information regarding the next year’s teachers and classes the week after school finishes, as our priority for this term is providing quality teaching and learning opportunities until the very end.

In the next month or so, teachers, in conjunction with the Learning Support staff and Leadership team of the school, will commence preparations for class groupings for the 2022 school year. If you feel you have information that teachers may not be already aware of, and which may be useful for this process, please ensure you notify your class teachers at your earliest convenience. A polite reminder that we do not take requests for particular teachers – they are all fabulous!

End of Year Christmas Concert *reminder*

Plans are underway with regards to our end-of-year Christmas function which will be held on Friday 19 November. Our P and F organises the food and bar on this night and it is always a lovely, informal way to finish off the school year as a community. Each class prepares a small item to perform on the night and we count on the majority of our students and families attending. Please inform your child’s teachers if they will be absent on the night as this may interfere with plans for ‘performances.’

Class items will commence at 6pm sharp. Please be advised that food will not be served until after the children’s performances. Children are to wear ‘Christmassy’ type clothes. Towards the end of the night, we often have a special, very jolly guest pop in to say hello to the children!

Bill's Amusements have been booked with a number of rides to be set up on the school oval. Pre-ordering and payment for the BBQ is essential and be will be via Flexischools. Rides tickets are also available via Flexischools, however additional ride tickets will be for sale on the night (cash only). A cash bar will operate.

 As always, we will be reliant on parent assistance on this night, please consider giving half an hour of your time to assist in some way.

In partnership,

Kellie Jenkinson

From the Assistant to the Principal: Religious Education (APRE)

Gospel Reflection

Mk 12:28-34

The wise scribe asks Jesus which is the greatest commandment.

One of the scribes came near and heard them disputing with one another, and seeing that he answered them well, he asked him, “Which commandment is the first of all?”  Jesus answered, “The first is, ‘Hear, O Israel: the Lord our God, the Lord is one; you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength.’ The second is this, ‘You shall love your neighbour as yourself.’ There is no other commandment greater than these.” Then the scribe said to him, “You are right, Teacher; you have truly said that ‘he is one, and besides him there is no other’; and ‘to love him with all the heart, and with all the understanding, and with all the strength,’ and ‘to love one’s neighbour as oneself,’—this is much more important than all whole burnt offerings and sacrifices.” When Jesus saw that he answered wisely, he said to him, “You are not far from the kingdom of God”. After that no one dared to ask him any question.

In reflection:

Think back over the last 24 hours. Try to list all the people you came in contact with – even if only momentarily or by sitting near them on a bus. Of all those encounters, where did you show love? Where did you show a lack of love? Where did you demonstrate a love of self or lack of love of self? Where could you have shown more awareness and more love? Project forward now over the next 24 hours. What opportunities for encounters with others can you predict? How might you better show love of self and love of neighbour?

Year 5H Prayer Assembly

Please join Year 5H in the Undercovered Area on Friday at 8.35 am for prayer.

Year 6 Students are selling Zooper Doopers to raise funds for Catholic Mission

Thank you to the families who have supported our Year 6 students who are selling Zooper Doopers each Tuesday and Thursday.  So far our school has raised $400 for Catholic Mission.  Thank you for your generosity. 

Continuing the Journey in the Catholic Faith Sacraments 2021 – 2022:

Continuing the Journey in the Catholic Faith Sacraments 2021 – 2022:

The journey has commenced. The second meeting will be held on 16 and 17 November. This meeting is for parents only. Parents need to attend one meeting on either night. 

When:  5.30pm -  6.30pm

Where: Kevin Castles Centre West Street. (Opposite Red Lion Hotel)

St Vincent de Paul Christmas Hamper Appeal

The St Vincent De Paul Society have launched their Christmas Appeal and the community of St Joseph’s Wandal are once again called to live out our school motto, “To Love is to Serve”. We are collecting donations of non-perishable items, which include tinned vegetables, cereals, long life milk, soft drinks, juice, and snacks such as chips, nuts, biscuits and lollies. Christmas themed items for donation may include Christmas puddings, Christmas cakes, mince pies, bon bons and long life custard. The hampers will be kept in classrooms. Thank you in advance, for your generosity to this worthy cause.

Yarning with Mrs Semple

This morning students gathered in the Be-Hive to listen to a Dreamy Story by Dr Romaine Moreton, who is a Goenpul Yagerabul Minjungbal Bundjalung woman from Tjerangeri (Stradbroke Island). Dr Romaine is a film maker, academic and artist.  We listened to her story ‘Moon Holds Water’. This was very relaxing!

These stories are great for quiet time and mediation, there are five Dreamy stories told by First Nations storytellers. The series draws on an 80,000-year-old oral tradition of bedtime stories, with each episode featuring a different tale accompanied by music and nature sounds.

If you would like to listen visit the website https://www.dreamysleep.com.au/ and just click ‘listen’.

Thank you to all the students who joined me this morning.

Term 4 Prayer Assembly dates

5 NovemberYear 5HAll Saints Day
11 NovemberYear 5MRemembrance Day 10.40 am Thursday
19 NovemberPrepPrayer Reflection
26 NovemberStaffChristmas Prayer Reflection
3 DecemberYear 6Graduation Prayer Reflection - Graduation Certificates

Thought of the Week!

Parish Bulletin

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With gratitude,

Rheanna Starr

Curriculum Update

2021 Spelling Bee

“Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”

– Nelson Mandela

Janette McLennan

Student Awards

“Striving for Excellence” Award – (for a student who has exhibited academic improvements and/or has been applying themselves to the very best of their ability).

Bailey T- For independently completing your weekly calendar in Mathematics. You were able to add detail to each day of the week. Great work Bailey!

Maisyn S - Year 4 - For being a poetry superstar!  You have written descriptive, sensory poems this week.  Keep up the great work - you have really impressed me.

Braxton B - Year 4 - For being a poetry superstar!  You have written descriptive, sensory poems this week.   Keep up the great work - you have really impressed me.

Lilliana J - Year 4 - For your humorous spoonerism about brothers.  It is a very worthy addition to our class poetry anthology.  Well Done!

Harrison E - Year 1 - For using commas and high level vocabulary in your writing. Well done on striving for excellence!

Sports News

Touch Football

Please see link for game times.

Calendar Dates for 2021

Term Dates for 2021

Term 4      5 October - 3 December -   9 weeks

November

5 November Year 5H Prayer Assembly - All Saints Day

7 November Chamber Music Concert 1:00 - 4:00 pm Cathedral

8 November RSCS Workshop and Music Evening (at TCC more info to come)

9 November Prep Orientation Day

11 November Remembrance Day

11 November Year 5M Prayer Asssembly - Remebrance Day 10:40

16- 17 November Parent Workshop Sacraments 

18 November AGM 5:15pm at St Joseph’s Wandal

19 November Prep Prayer Assembly

19 November Christmas Concert

24 November Year 6 Rite of Passage - St Joseph’s Cathedral 

26 November Staff Prayer Assembly

December

3 December Year 6 Graduation Assembly and Graduation Certificate

3 December Term 4 Concludes

Safe on Social Media

1. Who uses group chats to communicate with their friends? – The majority of the room raises their hand. 

2.         Who sleeps with their device in their room? – at least 80% of the room will raise their hand. 

3.         Who has received messages in a group chat after 9pm? – almost the whole room raises their hand. 

4.         Who has woken up to more than 200 messages in the group chat? – all of them raise their hands and talk about it amongst themselves, nodding in agreement. There is also the occasional "more like 1000" comment. 

5.         Who has attempted to read all of the messages? – the resounding response is constantly “checking to see if I was mentioned.” 

6.         Who has seen bullying or any other kind of inappropriate behaviour in the group chats? – all of them raise their hands. Who reported it? 99% of the hands go down. 

7.         Who has been readded to a group chat after they have left? Most raise their hands and eye-roll and comment on how annoying it is. 

 8.         Who gets a little anxious if their friends don’t respond to a message within a couple of minutes? – again, the majority raises their hands.

 So let’s break these down into nice little bite-size pieces on what you should do. 

Group chats can be an excellent way for many people to participate in an online conversation together. They can also be a place where drama, nasty behaviours, exclusion, and bullying can thrive. The most commonly used group chat apps are WhatsApp, Snap Chat, Instagram, Discord, Messenger, and Facebook Messenger. They can be both helpful and harmful. We recommend that children in Primary School only use Facebook Messenger for Kids, so parents have some control over what is going on in the group chat. You don’t have as much power on the other apps. 

We have real concerns about the number of young people (as young as eight in most cases) that sleep with devices in their room and under their pillow. They are responding to messages at 11, 12 even 1am. From “friends” all over the world that they are connected to. 

Please make sure you put a healthy boundary in place and keep phones and devices out of the bedroom from an early age. Remember, you are the parent, and you need to guide your children on how to be safe, and managing their mental health is a massive part of that. They need a break. They are connected 24/7, and some of those communications can get toxic in Group Chats. They need sleep. Good uninterrupted sleep. Rolling over in the middle of the night and checking messages is a significant health issue. You can read about that here: https://growingupinaustralia.gov.au/research-findings/annual-statistical-reports-2018/are-children-and-adolescents-getting-enough-sleep

There have also been many times when young people have engaged in nasty behaviour about another person in a group chat, then deliberately invited that person into the chat to see those comments. The deliberate nature of this abuse makes it cyberbullying. Re-adding someone once they have left a chat can also be bullying or harassment in some cases. 

When they are tired, they are more emotional and less resilient. Things can and may be taken out of context. No one has the right to choose what other people find offensive. There have been countless times when this has resulted in schools being contacted because of the nasty, bullying or inappropriate things happening in the chat. If this is happening in the home after hours between students, please think about how, as a parent, you can do more to support the school by setting healthier boundaries for device use in your home. 

Schools have a duty of care to minimise the risk of bullying and other dangers to a child, but it is challenging for them to police when the device is at home, under your roof, in your child’s bedroom. 

Help kids develop the skills to know how to leave a group chat that is not helpful or is harmful in any way, including the actual words they may use should they need to leave. With younger kids, teach them how to come up with statements that may help like, “Sorry guys, this is getting pretty nasty, I’m outta here”, as a way to remove themselves, also point out to the other people in the chat that the behaviours may be getting out of hand. Being in charge of their online interactions and knowing how to leave a conversation that makes them uncomfortable online or off is a vital life skill. 

Kids need to realise that they may be “guilty by association”, even if they aren’t saying the nasty stuff; they may be considered a bystander if they do not report it and speak up about what is happening in a group chat. 

Please help them to develop the skills to put boundaries around their friendships. We don’t have to be accessible all the time just because technology allows that. They need to know that they won’t lose friends if they are not available in the group to chat for 30 minutes while they have dinner. Young people need to be in charge and confident in their relationships. They need to know that their friends will understand that their refusal to engage at every moment of the day and night has nothing to do with the state of their relationship, but rather the management of their time, their devices and their life priorities. 

If your child is getting constantly re-added to a group chat that they have left, that can be considered harassment. If your child is re-adding people that have left the group chat remind them that they need consent. They need to ask the permission of the person first “do you want to be re-added to the group chat” for example. 

Parenting in this space is very difficult at times, we totally understand that. But please set boundaries and rules. These are required from a very early age. The earlier the better. A school should not be blamed every time something happens online as it is often something that they can’t 100% control if you have given your child a device and have different rules at home to what is at school. Schools educate students on cyber safety. Most schools offer parent education, in all aspects of online safety, and often only a few parents turn up to parent-focused talks. Please attend, I guarantee you will learn something new every time! 

Things to remember:

Keep group chats positive, helpful and supportive. These are not the places we have a whinge about someone else, reveal our intimate secrets or create drama, gossip or spread rumours or share images of others without consent. 

Make sure they know not to feel compelled to respond straight away or be a part of every single interaction in the group chat.

Remember, there are plenty of ways these chats can become very public if someone takes a screenshot, so they need to be kind, respectful, and responsible at all times. 

Avoid using late at night and keep devices out of the bedroom.

Turn off notifications, so they are less anxious about response times. 

Value this information? Want more? Our Safe on Social Toolkit for Schools is now available. To find out more click here www.safeonsocialtoolkit.com

Community Announcements

Splash n Dash

Pumped Sport’s new Splash n Dash event is coming to St Joseph's Catholic Primary School Wandal on Thursday 25 November starting at 3:15pm and runs for 75 minutes. Cash or credit card payments can be made on the day. Children kindy aged and older are $15 and toddlers are $10. For more information and to register head to https://pumpedsport.com.au/events/


Movie Night Free

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