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Dear Parents, Guardians and Carers,
St Michael’s staff and students invite you to the St Michael’s 2023 Art Exhibition and family afternoon on Friday 10th November 1:45 pm – 3:00 pm. Visitors will be able to view an exhibition of student art in the school hall and in the classrooms as well as join with the students and staff in an afternoon of art activities.
We invite families (parents, grandparents, siblings) to take this opportunity to view a showcase of art that the children have created throughout the year. Art activities will be occurring in all classes across the afternoon and family members are invited to join with their children to complete these.
Please take note of the following organisational details for the day:
- All visitors will be required to sign in on arrival. To cater for the number of visitors we anticipate, there will be multiple points throughout the school for this sign in to occur. Visitors are recommended to have a mobile phone to ensure this process runs smoothly.
- To manage the number of people viewing the art exhibition at one time, visits into the exhibition will be timetabled based on surnames. Families can choose to join in art activities in classrooms while they wait for their turn to visit the exhibition or plan their arrival closer to the scheduled time. The approximate times for these visits are as follows:
1:50 pm |
Families with a surname between A- G |
2:20 pm |
Families with a surname between H - O |
2:40 pm |
Families with a surname between P- Z |
If you are unable to join us on Friday to view the exhibition, we will have additional times available to visit the exhibition before and after school. These times will be:
Friday 10th November (3:00 - 3:45pm)
Monday 13th November (3:20-4:00pm)
Wednesday 15th November (8:30-9:00am)
Enough Written by Dr Justin Coulson
Many of our children are drenched in the insecurity of feeling incomplete, inadequate, insufficient. And even our seemingly confident and competent kids are struggling. The ones who are “succeeding”, the ones who are ticking all of the right boxes, the ones who are “winning”, are often the WORST at feeling like they’re “enough”.
I wish it weren’t true, but it is our well-intentioned attempts to optimise our children’s success in the future that can leave them feeling like it’s all too much. After evaluating over 50 studies, one pair of researchers concluded that “increases in excessive parental expectations and harsh parental criticism offer perhaps the most plausible explanation for rising perfectionism to date.”
This is not to lay the blame solely at the feet of parents. Rising levels of societal individualism, focus on attainment, increasing economic inequality and rising competitiveness have created a societal background that easily leads to controlling parenting practices and excessive parental expectations. We have the best of intentions in wanting our children to succeed, but in trying to secure a good future for our kids, we expect too much, criticize too harshly, and minimise their autonomy. All of this leads to a tremendous number of kids feeling that they’re not ‘enough’.
Yet with so many of our children feeling that they are not enough, a helpful question to ask is:
What does ‘enough’ look like?
“If I could only… then I will be enough”, “If I can just… then I will be enough”, “When I achieve… then I will be enough.” A sense of “enough” will never come this way. It can’t. Because even when those things are achieved, there will always be someone more beautiful, smarter, or funnier. Valuing self based on extrinsic characteristics will always lead to feeling incomplete, inadequate, insufficient, imperfect.
Another form of success – what I call intrinsic success – is built on the development of character. It accumulates over time through steady, consistent effort and an emphasis on doing the inner work of becoming a better person.
Here are five things we can do to help our children overcome their anxieties and perfectionism and achieve intrinsic success:
1. Show them they matter
People who know they matter are more resilient and engaged in life than those without a sense of mattering. We show someone they matter by demonstrating that our love and care for them is not conditional upon performance.
2. Teach them who they are
Children who are told family stories believe they are responsible and that they are capable of controlling things rather than being at the mercy of external or environmental elements. Children who know their family identity tend to feel better about themselves. They have “roots”.
3. Be a hope builder
If we are hope-ful we know where we’re going (goals), can see a way to get there (pathways), and believe we can actually walk that path (agency). As parents, we must be hope builders in our children’s lives. We do that by helping them identify things that are worth working towards by setting goals based on personal interests and passions. We help them break the goal down into smaller tasks and make sure they have the resources, tools, and information required to pursue their goal. And we celebrate their achievements, provide reassurance when they face difficulties, and remind them that setbacks are opportunities for growth and learning.
4. Encourage them to do hard things
Competence is a vital human need. Yet you don’t become confident by shouting affirmations in the mirror or having your parents pump up your tyres with false praise. It comes from doing the hard thing again and again. And then it comes from celebrating achievement. When they do the hard thing, ask your child how it felt to progress. Boost them up with real compliments and genuine praise – praise that reflects their own positive self-evaluations and helps them feel good about their efforts.
5. Help them make a real difference
We all need to be a part of something larger than ourselves. Spencer W. Kimball, a former leader of the Church of Jesus Christ, said, “We become more substantive as we serve others—indeed, it is easier to “find” ourselves because there is so much more of us to find!” Perhaps we might help our children realise they are enough by encouraging them to step outside themselves and look outwards in service to others. In so doing, I believe they’ll discover that, while no one may ever be quite “enough”, they will be more than they ever could have been otherwise.
Ultimately, here’s what I want our kids to know:
I am enough because of who I am right now in this moment.
Being enough isn’t something that our kids need to achieve. It isn’t something that is determined by what they have done. It is their ability to accept themselves completely in the present moment that gives them the ability to feel like they are enough.
They are enough. Right now. Just the way they are.
DATES TO REMEMBER:
- 30th October - 2nd November: Foundation Swimming Program (Week One)
- 1st - 3rd November: Grade 5 Camp
- 6th November: School Closure Day
- 7th November: Melbourne Cup Day Public Holiday
- 10th November: School Art Show
- 13th - 16th November: Foundation Swimming Program (Week Two)
- 20th November: Foundation 2024 Transition
- 22nd November: Foundation 2024 Information Meeting
- 25/26 November - First Communion celebrations
- 1st December - School Closure Day
- 8th December - End of year Mass
- 13th December - Graduation Mass]
- 18th December - students last day
Jodie
The question and response that we see in this week's gospel was a common form of scholarly debate in the Jewish tradition. The Pharisees ask Jesus which of the commandments is the greatest. Jesus responds by directly quoting the commandment from the ancient scriptures. His reply, ‘You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind,’ comes directly from Deuteronomy 6:4. Further, Jesus’ followup, ‘you must love your neighbour as yourself,’ comes from Leviticus 19:18. Deuteronomy and Leviticus are two of the first five books of the Bible that make up the Jewish Torah, or Law.
Jesus’ words call us to love our neighbour as ourselves. We are called to treat others as we would like to be treated ourselves. To be able to do this, we need to picture ourselves in their place – experiencing all that they are experiencing; not imposing our own values and circumstances. To see ourselves in the place of another is the key to responding with compassion. The origin of the word ‘compassion’ means experiencing with. If we are able to truly ‘experience with’ another person perhaps then we can genuinely recognise and respond to their needs. In our community, who are the ‘neighbours’ not loved as we love ourselves? What actions can we take to better love our neighbour as we love ourselves?
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 5 the School Wide Expectation focus is 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.
Harry Greaves | Noah Del Mundo | Jacob Zelenewicz |
Grace Wilson | Cohen Shields | Anika Roscoe |
Mia Celima | Angus Ross | Rowan Dunne |
Ashton Giersch | Isabelle Paulet | Lucy Graham |
Keeley Brown | Arlie Graham | Odin Heystraten |
Olivia Bond | Campbell Quail | Sienna Athanasiadis |
Hannah Rochstad-Lim | Aaryan Thusmanraj | Leigham Frendo |
from the Parents and Friends Group
The shop will be open every 4th Thursday of the month. The next day it will be open will be on Thursday 23rd November from 3:00pm to 3:30pm. The stall is located in the large meeting room at the school, so those wishing to purchase items will need to enter through the main office. Donations and swaps welcome.