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Dear Parents, Guardians and Carers,
Winter has certainly arrived and with it the much colder and wetter days. If it is raining we will keep the children inside but otherwise at recess and lunchtime they will be going outside to play and get fresh air. We have noticed that some children are arriving in shorts and t-shirts. Please ensure that your child is dressed warmly enough to be able to be comfortable to be outside. It has also been noted that a significant amount of students are wearing black socks with their sports uniform. This is not part of our school uniform policy and we ask for your assistance by ensuring your child wears the correct school uniform including wearing their sports uniform in the proper manner.
It’s been lovely to see parents and grandparents coming to visit classrooms on a Friday morning, the children are so excited to show off their classroom and the learning they have been doing. Parents are also invited to attend assemblies on a Friday afternoon. Assembly starts at 1:45pm. Parents can enter via the hall door next to the church and sign in via the QR codes at the entrance.
Just a reminder that the student-led conferences are being held on Wednesday 22nd June and Thursday 23rd June. You will be able to book an appointment via PAM if you haven’t already done so. Each student led conference will go for no longer than 10 minutes. Please respect the time slot you have been allocated, as going over time or running late greatly impacts other parents and teachers.
Teaching kids to be kind
by Rachel Tomlinson
Judgement and criticism are the stock in trade for many people in today’s fast-paced world. In our playgrounds and parks, children often act cruelly – or are simply uninterested in how other people feel. Little kids, big kids, and even adults can respond reactively and unthinkingly, or sometimes intentionally, with unkindness.
Although being unkind is nothing new (it’s happened from the beginning of humanity), technology is enabling cruelty in faster, easier, anonymous ways. Technology is also making it hard for our kids to develop skills to delay gratification. Exercising impulse control – self regulation – is trickier because waiting isn’t needed. These things combine to make it increasingly hard to be a compassionate and kind person, someone who considers the needs of others rather than acting out of self-interest. It demands intention and commitment.
The helper’s high
Our brains release "feelgood" chemicals (like oxytocin, serotonin, and endorphins) which fight stress and make us feel happy when we engage in, or even witness, acts of kindness. It’s called the “helper’s high” and it’s our brains' way of rewarding us for doing good, making us want to repeat the behaviour to get the same good feeling again. Not only does being kind feel good, but it generally keeps us safe because it makes us more likely to be accepted by social groups. It builds social capital when we are considerate of the needs of others.
Create opportunities for kindness
Even though they are hardwired for kindness we still need to create opportunities for our kids to engage in acts of kindness. We also need them to know what it feels like to have someone treat them kindly (so they know what behaviours to copy, and why kindness is important). So how can you help them?
Model kindness
Show your children how you treat others kindly. Hold open doors for people, put trolleys back that are in the middle of the car park, drop a meal to a sick family member, donate old towels to an animal shelter, let someone in when traffic is heavy.
They don’t have to be grand gestures, just small and gentle ways of considering the needs of others.
Use kind language
Consider how you speak to your child and what you say when you speak. Ask how you speak about others (and yourself). Our kids use our behaviour as templates for how they should act. So let them see your compassion shine through for those around you. Be kind as you listen. Be kind as you talk. Say kind things.
Encourage helping
Is one child great at maths and their younger sibling isn’t? Invite them to teach them or guide them through their homework. Ask them to show you how to play their favourite video game. If they are great at cooking, ask them to help you prepare dinner. Having them involved in prosocial ways gives them a helper’s high.
Build their emotional intelligence
Kids who struggle to regulate and manage their emotions will find it harder to treat others with compassion. An essential part of teaching kids to be kind centres on teaching them to manage challenging emotions, and giving them coping strategies to navigate their way through.
- Teach them the words for feelings. Without the right words to share how they feel it can leave kids confused, fearful and frustrated…which only serves to make their big feelings more intense. When you see them experiencing a feeling, name it for them: “I can see that made you so mad”, “I wonder if you felt sad when your friend left you out”.
- Help them identify when they are escalating, but don’t try and reason with them when they are in the “red zone” – we cannot reason with them at this stage as they are in the emotional part of the brain (mid brain) not the part that lets them be logical (pre-frontal cortex). Discuss strategies and practice when they feel calm. Get them doing things like squeezing play dough, talking about how they feel, going for a run, switching on music that makes them feel good, drawing or writing stuff down.
When you do this, you’re being kind, teaching kindness, and helping them be kind to themselves.
In closing
Encouraging kids to be kind is essential in helping them avoid seeking instant gratification, ego-centric solutions, or being cruel. When people are empathic and kind they are more likely to experience better overall wellbeing, this is in part due to the helper’s high, but also because they feel fulfilled and tend to have better quality relationships. Kindness is cool!
Kind regards,
Jodie
Important message about School Fees
On Sunday we celebrated the Feast of Pentecost. Pentecost was celebrated fifty days after the Passover and it is considered to be the birthday of the Church. Jesus promised that he would not leave us orphans, so when he left our world he breathed his own life into us through the Holy Spirit. It is the Holy Spirit who lives in us, guides us and helps us live the gospel throughout the years. The celebration of Pentecost is a time for joy and hope. It is a time to reflect on the promise that Jesus made; that the Holy Spirit would be with us to guide and teach us throughout the days of our life. Last Friday evening 31 of our Grade 6 students received the Sacrament of Confirmation. This is a time where our students receive the gift of the Holy Spirit to guide them on their life journey, to give them joy, hope, strength and wisdom. The Holy Spirit lives in us, as a result we do not need to fear for our future or for the future of the Church.
St. Michael’s Primary School has a long tradition of supporting our local St. Vincent de Paul Society. Each year we support two collections for St Vinnies: June, for the Mass of the Sacred Heart and December, for the Christmas Appeal.
We are excited that this year we will be able to celebrate the Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus with a whole school mass on Thursday 23rd June at 11:30am. Our school community is invited to come along and share the Eucharist with us.
Each child is asked to bring items of non-perishable food to school by Wednesday 22nd June. Any support you can offer at this time would be greatly appreciated. If you have any questions please speak with your classroom teacher.
Thank you for supporting this worthwhile cause.
Sue Rickwood
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 6 the School Wide Expectation focus was Safety:
I have the right to feel safe in our school environment.
The award winners for Week 6 are:
Elise Mckenna | Indee Ross | Isabella Suter |
Callum Jensen | Mack Hayes | Makayla Atkins |
Avery Dunne | Isabelle Paulet | Hayden Rawson |
Scarlett Ryan | Harrison Rathjen | Tyler Zandona |
Alannah Ross | Aurora Buhagiar | Harrison Ritchie |
Frankie Colgan | Jaise Maiden | Ellery Kornet |
Clarence Mavhundu | Evie Billam | Archer Rowley |
Bobbi Heatherill | Aubrey Ross | Jye Van Iwaarden |
Hannah Rochstad-Lim | Lucas Groves | Eliza Herbert |
Theo Moretti | Jaxon Flowers | Christopher Keo |
Mila Campbell | Jack Krieger | Levi Field |
Oliver Ploegmakers | Jorge Marcou | Oliver Rankcom |
Violet Cauchi | Kenzy Duddington | Grace Seeber |
Vivienne Crozier | Amahlie Smith | Lilly Duran |
Kaiden Garth | Odin Heystraten | Estelle Archibald |
Victorian Premiers' Reading Challenge 2022
Victorian Premiers’ Reading Challenge
The Victorian Premiers’ Reading Challenge is now open and (insert school name) is excited to be participating. The PRC application offers a range of exciting features including:
- access to a library catalogue (including book images and blurbs)
- a modern user-friendly interface
- rewarding students with badges as challenge milestones are achieved
- the option for students to mark books as a favourite, give them a star rating or complete a book review
The Challenge is open to all Victorian children from birth to Year 10 in recognition of the importance of reading for literacy development. It is not a competition; but a personal challenge for children to read a set number of books by 2 September 2022.
Children from Prep to Year 2 are encouraged to read or ‘experience’ 30 books with their parents and teachers. Children from Year 3 to Year 10 are challenged to read 15 books.
All children who meet the Challenge will receive a certificate of achievement signed by the Victorian Premier and former Premiers.
To read the Premier’s letter to parents, view the booklist and for more information about the Victorian Premiers’ Reading Challenge, visit: https://www.vic.gov.au/premiers-reading-
challenge
To join the challenge please click on the link below:
CALM AND CO-OPERATIVE KIDS
Wednesday 8th of June 2022 at 7pm (AEST)
Learn to help children who have a tendency towards frustration, have difficulties managing impulses or feeling unco-operative.
Click here:https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87172614896?pwd=K0YxWU5YYy9aYnZqcjlsakw1RXNRZz09
Zoom Meeting ID: 871 7261 4896 Passcode: 276561
No RSVP necessary but “zoom in” quickly as only 100 zoom spots available each session. We ask that in the zoom waiting room you provide your email and postcode for handouts to be provided.
Presented by Calm Kid Central and clinical child psychologist Kirrilie Smout. Kirrilie has had 25 years experience in working with children and families, is the author of two books about children and mental health and regularly consults with national bodies about child mental health concerns. She is the Director of Calm Kid Central, an online program of courses to help children manage emotional health challenges. Go to: www.calmkidcentral.com (Free using FIRSTYEAR access code). Or scan the QR code which sends you directly to Calm Kid Central.
Any questions please contact Sandra on: sandra@developingminds.net.au