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Dear Parents, Guardians and Carers,
We ask parents, guardians and carers to continue to remain vigilant in preventing COVID-19 transmission. Any student who is unwell should continue to remain at home. This is about keeping students healthy and well in our school and reducing the spread of both COVID-19 and other illnesses.
Parents, guardians and carers of students who are unwell, including displaying symptoms of COVID-19, will be contacted to collect their child from school and asked to keep them home until they are no longer symptomatic.
Students who are absent from school for an extended period of time, will be supported in their learning with work on google classroom.
We have quite a few events coming up in the lead up towards the end of the school year. We are looking forward to celebrating these with you as a community.
DIVERSITY DASH
St Michael’s Primary School is proudly a diverse school, with students from more than 20 different cultures and language backgrounds. As part of a new initiative by School Sport Victoria and in recognition of our diverse and inclusive school community, this year’s walk-a-thon is a Diversity Dash which will be a fun, social, colourful and inclusive event.
This annual event is an important whole school fundraiser, empowering our students to help raise money for their school, while promoting healthy exercise and fun with their friends and teachers.
During this year’s event, there will be colourful music stations where students have the opportunity to take a break, have a dance and be sprayed with colour! Colour is optional and students wishing to take part MUST wear a white t-shirt during the Diversity Dash and bring their school polo top and spare shorts to change at the conclusion of the event!
This year, the junior course will also have a range of obstacles for children to enjoy!
At the completion of walking, students will enjoy fresh fruit!
There will be prizes for:
- Highest individual fundraiser
- Highest fundraising class
- Boy and girl that completes the most laps from each year level
If you are able to volunteer to assist at the event please follow the link below:
All sponsorship money needs to be collected and paid via CDFpay by 10pm Tuesday 22nd November 2022. Prizes will be awarded at a special school assembly Thursday 24th November.
ART SHOW
St Michael’s staff and students invite you to the St Michael’s 2022 Art Exhibition and family
Afternoon on Friday 18th November 1:50 – 3:00 pm. Visitors will be able to visit the student art exhibition in the school hall and join the students and staff in an afternoon of art activities in the classroom.
(Entry to the exhibition will be staggered to allow as many visitors as possible to easily access the hall. More information to follow)
Entry to the exhibition will be through the Seymour Street entrance.
We look forward to families joining us as we celebrate The Arts.
St Michael’s Parish Family Day:
You are all warmly invited to the Parish Christmas family Day on Sunday December 4th.
Helping your young perfectionist
-
Dr Kaylene Henderson
There’s a perception in our society that perfectionism is a good thing, akin to ‘being perfect..’ That it’s something we should strive for or drop into conversation in job interviews… Yet the reality is quite different.
Perfectionism leads us to place unreasonably and often unrealistically high expectations on ourselves. Essentially, it causes us to raise the bar so high, that we frequently wind up feeling like failures, consumed by frustration and self-blame.
Of course, this can be very unsettling to witness in our kids and it can be hard for us to know how best to help. It can start when our children are very young and grow with them in intensity and impact. Perhaps you have a young child who refuses to draw because her drawings don’t look exactly like those of an adult artist. Or maybe your little guy becomes so distressed by a small mistake in his homework, that he insists on starting all over again in his unhealthy quest for perfection.
If you have older kids, perhaps they refuse to submit an assignment because it’s not perfect, or they won’t run the cross country because they know they won’t win.
While it’s great for our kids to hold high expectations of themselves, aiming for perfection actually sets them up to fail. Their habitual ‘all or nothing’ thinking leads to the unhelpful belief that if they don’t achieve 100%, they’ve as good as flunked. Their focus on their mistakes rather than on their successes often affects their self esteem, fuelling a vicious cycle that can lead to stress, depression and anxiety if left unchecked.
The sooner we help our kids break this unhealthy habit, the better. So let’s look at a few tips for doing just that.
Reduce your praise
There are two ways in which we tend to praise children. ‘Content praise’ often draws attention to the end product, for example, “What a fantastic drawing!”, or to a fixed quality in a child, such as “You’re so clever”. In contrast, ‘process praise’ focuses on how your child got there. When we use process praise, we draw attention to their good ideas, problem solving approaches, effort, persistence, concentration and enthusiasm.
While it’s helpful for all children to experience more process praise than content praise, this is particularly true for children with perfectionistic traits. This allows us to draw the focus away from how impressive the end result might (or should) be and instead highlight the importance of having a go, trying their best and learning along the way.
For example, rather than saying, ‘What a fantastic drawing! You’re an amazing artist – what were you worried about?’, it’s more helpful to say something like, ‘It’s great to see you having a go at drawing. I love watching you try new things’; or, ‘I love seeing the ideas you come up with when you draw’.
Of course, most of the time we needn’t praise children at all. Saying simply, ‘Drawing is fun isn’t it?,’ is often enough to provide children with that all important sense of connection.
Model making mistakes
At my children’s school, they’re taught to embrace ‘flearning’ – learning through failure. Admittedly, my children witness me ‘flearning’ all the time at home, but in the eyes of your child, you might seem perfect. It’s helpful for your kids to see that you make mistakes too, and importantly to learn through your modelling how mistakes can be managed.
Look for (or create!) opportunities to do this. When you’re planning on bringing some spoons to the dining table, you could bring knives over instead and say, ‘Oops, my mistake. Not to worry. I’ll just go back and swap these over.’ Or, perhaps you could draw alongside your toddler and deliberately keep from drawing inside the lines, commenting to your little one as you go, ‘I love drawing with you’. By doing so, you model for your child that mistakes are okay, that they needn’t hamper their enjoyment of a task and importantly, that the end result isn’t all that matters.
Teach your child to speak to themselves as a friend
How does your child talk to themselves?
Would they speak to a friend in the same way?
No? Then what might they say instead?
We all know how much our inner voice can affect how we feel. Teach your child to be kind to themselves. To be supportive, forgiving and encouraging, even when they make mistakes.
Consider how you react when your child behaves in an ‘imperfect’ way
Do you respond calmly when your child accidentally spills cereal all over the kitchen bench or do you tend to overreact? It’s important when we’re teaching our children that they needn’t be perfect, that our responses back this up.
By accepting our children as they are – wonderful, ‘good enough’ young learners – we teach them to do the same. And that’s so much better than perfect.
Kind regards,
Reminder:
We are very excited to be having another Lunch order day on Friday 11th November with My School Lunches. Children can choose between a Sub, Drink and Cookie Meal Deal or Sub and a Drink Meal Deal. Orders close at 9:00am on Wednesday 9th November. If your child has dietary requirements please add them to the notes section when you place your order.
Please click on the link below to complete the form if you are able to help with delivering lunches to classrooms on the day. Helpers needed from approx 12:15pm - 1:00pm.
Lunch Order Helpers - Friday 11th November
Please scan the QR code below to order or click the link. This lunch order cannot be ordered via CDFpay.
https://myschoollunch.com.au/
Our journey on earth is to prepare us for our meeting with God. Everything that we do should build a smoother road and help us to look forward to our final destination. Jesus set the perfect example of a life based solely on the love and service of God. He heard God within his heart and followed God's will with his actions. By accepting the challenges of each day and keeping our trust in God, we can live a faithful life that will welcome the magnificent experience to be with him forever. In the gospel this week we hear about the Sadducces. The Sadducces were a group of priests of the Jewish church who did not believe in life after death and they were displeased that so many people were listening to Jesus. When dealing with the Sadducces and their trick questions, Jesus gives us a glimpse of life after death. And what a glimpse it is! We will be like angels and will be God's children. News like that just HAS to cheer us up, even on those days where nothing seems to go right.
Mission Day
Friday 28th October was a very successful celebration of Mission Day at St Michael’s. With our theme of “Kicking Goals for Good!” the children arrived in school dressed in a wide range of sporting attire. Throughout the day the children participated in a range of lessons and activities with a focus on Ethiopia and our efforts for the Goat Rearing Centre in Embider.
Congratulations to the students and staff for their generous hearts and their ongoing support and enthusiasm for our Mission work. The activities that we do at school around Catholic Mission give the children the opportunity to learn about children and communities around the world that are not as fortunate as we are in Australia. This is our chance to “walk in the footsteps of Jesus” in our daily lives.
On Mission Day the community of St Michael's raised $1000 for Ethiopia. That will provide the funds for another 10 goats for the Goat Rearing Centre.
Any child in grade 4 and above that has been Baptised and celebrated 1st Reconciliation is able to celebrate 1st Communion this term.
Some important dates for the calendar are:
Pin Mass – 12th /13th November
1st Communion celebrations:
Saturday 19th November 5pm
Sunday 20th November 9.30am
Sunday 20th November 5pm
Each week students from each class are awarded Student of the Week certificates. These children are nominated for the example they have been within the school based on the School Wide Expectation focus for that week. The weekly focus will be from Wednesday until Tuesday the following week. Awards will be presented to students at assembly on Friday.
In Week 4 the School Wide Expectation focus was Learning :
I set high expectations of what I can achieve.
I work hard and always try my best.
I reflect on my own learning and how I can improve.
I can receive and act on feedback.
The award winners for Week 4 are:
Elsie Stanistreet | Zahlie Johnstone | Corey Moore |
Wyatt Verdaas | Liam Thomas | Blake Warne |
Connor Affleck | Amaya Freshwater | Hayden Rawson |
Christian Paolini | Tayla Andrews | Xavier Buhagiar |
Kyah Pham | Aethon Mankombil | Sibella MacPherson |
Eva Brady | Luke Taylor | Tom Webber |
Billy Cooper | Aurora Buhagiar | Jack Lemon |
Evie Wyers | Sebastian Mazza | Adam Hurley |
Ashar Saini | Indiana Demetriou | Xavier Pettie |
Cadence Van Unen | Tyler Benbow | Indi Bowen |
Mack Prince | Aoife Doherty | Lucy Graham |
Riaan Sharma | Jack Krieger | Harper Wurlod |
Eden Zammit | Leisha Poole | Max Auteri |
Sienna Hunter | Jaymes Johnstone | Kahil Hughes |