Week 8 Tuesday 15th June 2021 ISSUE: 10

Catholic Education South Australia
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Winter Woolies Day - Wednesday 16th June (gold coin donation)

Sacrament of Confirmation - Friday 18th June, 7pm

Sacrament of First Holy Communion - Saturday19th June, 2pm

Sacrament of Confirmation - Friday 25th June, 7pm

Sacrament of First Holy Communion - Saturday 26th June, 2pm

Term 2 Ends - Friday 2nd July - 3.10pm finish

YMCA  OSHC Vacation Care - available during the July School holidays (Bookings Essential)

Term 3 Begins -  Tuesday 20th July

School Photo Day - Week 1 - Thursday 22nd July

 
 
 

From the Principal

Welcome to Week 8. I hope you and your family were able to spend some quality time together over the extended weekend with some fun activities to keep you all busy. Last Friday on the Student Free Day our staff participated in some professional learning in the 5th and final Assessment and Moderation learning module which we have worked through during the last 9 months. Our staff have learned a lot and the presenter on Friday made the point that she was most impressed with the knowledge and understanding our staff displayed in the areas of assessment, reporting, moderation, use of data and feedback. All of these skills and learning will be used to great effect as our staff focus on Report writing for all students which are due to be distributed at the end of this term. Hopefully the Report you receive for your child will be reflective of where they are at in their learning journey and the information you receive will not be surprising or new to you. The purpose of the Semester One Reports is a summary of your child’s learning over the first half of the year.

Tomorrow our students will be participating in a Winter Woolies fund-raising event to raise money for St Vincent De Paul. This is a practical and simple way for our students to show their support for a local cause, and donate some much needed funds to the local chapter of the statewide St Vincent De Paul society. We encourage all students to wear their scarves, beanies and gloves in order to be able to make a donation to this worthwhile cause. The Minister for Education – the Honourable Mr John Gardner will be visiting our school tomorrow as well and no doubt, our Social Justice leaders will use the opportunity to share their thoughts and ideas with him about how they are making our local community members more comfortable and providing them with a better quality lifestyle. Please check our Facebook page for some photos of this event.

This coming weekend a number of students in Year 3 & 4 will join parish based students and celebrate the Sacraments of Confirmation and First Holy Communion. We offer our thoughts and prayers for these students, their sponsors and their families as they prepare for these most important events in their sacramental journey. The students have spent a number of months in preparation for these next steps in their faith journey and I’m sure you will join me in wishing them a wonderful celebration and every blessing on their sacramental pathway.

In closing please make sure you go to the link of this month’s Southern Cross to check out the photo of students at our school celebrating Catholic Education Week. There some other great articles to read as well! Have a good week.

James Meiksans

 
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Aprim News

This week we begin our celebrations for the children making their Sacraments. On Friday evening our first group will be Confirmed by Father Philip Marshall VG. On Saturday this group will make their First Holy Communion with Father Eldridge. We are blessed to be able to celebrate these sacraments with family and sponsors from interstate and a Church that can be filled to full capacity. Quite a different scene to last year. Our second group will celebrate next weekend. Please pray for our sacramental candidates that the Holy Spirit fills them and God guides them as they completed their Sacraments of Initiation into the Catholic Church.

Last week I took our sacramental candidates to the Church participate in Reconciliation as preparation for their upcoming sacraments. Fr Eldridge spoke to the children about how it is important to regularly go to Reconciliation as an ongoing part of their Catholic faith. Just like the Eucharist, sacraments are not something we do once and forget about.

This Wednesday our Mini Vinnies group have organised to raise money for the Vinnies Newton Conference with a Winter Woolies Casual Day. Thankyou to the families who have filled our Vinnies Donation Bins with many blankets and clothes for the Winter Appeal.

On Sunday it was the Feast of St Anthony of Padua, who was a Franciscan Friar and a great follower and friend of St Francis of Assisi. We often pray to St Anthony to recover lost items. This tradition dates back to a time where St Anthony himself lost something. As the story goes, St Anthony had a favourite book of psalms that was very valuable to him. It was suspected that a novice stole the book from him and St Anthony prayed desperately for the return of his beloved possession. Shortly after the novice returned the precious book to St Anthony and begged for forgiveness.

Let us pray

Anthony, glorious servant of God, famous for your merits and powerful miracles, help us to find what was lost. Give us your help in times of temptation; and enlighten our minds in searching the will of God. Help us to find again the life of grace, which our sin destroyed, and lead us to the possession of the glory promised us by the Saviour. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Melissa Canil

 
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Wellbeing News

Madhavi Parker from Positive Minds Australia has been providing parents from the Eastern Star Program with regular workshops on parenting skills. Have a read of an article by Madhavi about Raising Resilient Children.

Raising Resilient Children

by Madhavi Nawana Parker, Director of Positive Minds Australia.

Why resilience?

Resilient children can be easier to get along with, thanks to their more even temperament, psychological flexibility and ability to get on with things without kicking up more of a fuss than is necessary or constructive.

What is Resilience?

Resilience is mentally and emotionally coping with and adapting to challenges in helpful, constructive ways in order to return to a healthy state of wellbeing in a reasonable amount of time.

What you need to know about resilience before you teach it?

Children can be resilient one moment and the next minute, unbuckle and unravel into a pit of emotional chaos. This doesn’t make someone outright ‘resilient’ or ‘not resilient.’

Resilience is a lifelong process, growing with time, practice, encouragement, brain maturity and exposure to enough (but not too much) challenge and adversity that is supported compassionately and wisely.

There are many factors like personality, temperament, developmental factors, interacting with genetic predispositions and environment that affect where you sit on the resilience spectrum. In one family, you can have siblings sitting on opposite points on the resilience scale. Don’t blame yourself for your less resilient child. At the same time, don’t get tempted to applaud yourself for your more resilient one!

Instead, look at your child’s personality and support them from where they’re at, for who they are. Because of their age, limited life experience and ‘still under construction’ brains, most toddlers, pre-schoolers, children and teenagers aren’t consistently or predominantly resilient (yet). This doesn’t necessarily reflect how resilient they will be as adults, so try not to get ahead of yourself.

When will my child ‘get more resilient’?

Your hard work to support your child’s resilience, may not show itself until your child is older and has reached a point of brain maturation that allows them to act more resiliently. For some, (sorry folks) this may well be around the time they move out of home!

 

5 Ways to help your child build resilience

1. Develop your own resilience.

One of the cold hard facts of parenting is that we can’t expect our children to be good at something they don’t see us Role Modelling. Parenting consumes its fair share of physical and emotional energy. Many parents find themselves running off an ‘energy deficit,’ because they can barely find time to pause and take care of themselves. When your wellbeing hits rock bottom, so will your resilience. So, take care of yourself, ask for and accept help, rest, recover, take short cuts and do as much as possible to lay a foundation of healthy wellbeing so you too, can be resilient through the ups and downs of parenting.

 

2. Don’t make resilience sound easy or minimise your child’s problems.

If something feels big to them – that’s because it is big to them. A child’s perception and experience of a difficulty is often perceived in a magnified way, because of their developing brain. The thinking and rationalising part of their brain is still growing, so emotions tend to take over quickly and be felt deeply. When they are upset about something, no matter how small it might seem to you, it can help to say something like, ‘it looks like you’re having a hard time,’ and ‘I can see this is hard for you.’ These words reassure your child that you acknowledge their experience is tough for them and that you care about that. Be careful not to over empathise though – just genuinely show you take their feelings seriously. Resilience grows from having a space for all your feelings and not being made to feel like something is wrong with you, for having them.

 

3. Help your child develop confidence through competence.

Children need to know they can do things on their own and that they are coping for their age. While it can be tempting to do everything for our children as an expression of love and support, the message that can emerge is ‘you’re not good enough on your own – you need someone else to be truly competent.’ While this is partially true, as well all need people in our lives who care about us and are willing to help when we need it, helping more than is necessary is not helpful for resilience. Try and avoid doing too many things that they can do for themselves. What skills they might be ready to build? Tidying up? Preparing meals? Mopping and vacuuming? Look at your child’s age, personality and developmental abilities and help them build confidence through competence.

 

4. Find time for connection.

Healthy relationships with parents and carers is crucial for resilience. Quality one on one time can be difficult in a family but your undivided attention helps your child feel an inner confidence that they matter and are seen, heard and valued for who they are. Show your delight when you see them, especially first thing in the morning and after time apart (and try warm connection before you provide any kind of direction).

 

5. Encourage healthy risk taking.

Taking healthy risks is about being willing to give something a go without a guarantee of success. No one likes to fail or see things didn’t turn out as planned. Everything feels much better when you succeed. What can happen to many children is, through fear of failure, some great opportunities get avoided altogether. Being willing to take risks that aren’t guaranteed success is an important part of building resilience and wellbeing because it allows your child to practice courage and vulnerability which help you be more confident through the ups and downs of life. Healthy risks look different for everyone. Think about your child and your family, follow your gut and look into ways they can step a little more out of their comfort zone, with your loving and empathic support to move closer towards becoming braver and more confident.

Resilience Takes Time

Remember that being rushed into resilience doesn’t work and nor does a ‘toughen up, sink or swim’ approach. Resilience takes time, growing through day to day experiences that allow children to see they are loved and supported through adversity, yet capable and competent to go the distance themselves. The most important thing is that you are patient with them and patient with yourself, remembering that no one gets it right all the time.

More information and free resources from Madhavi can be found at https://positivemindsaustralia.com.au

 
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The Southern Cross Newsletter

Please follow the link to the latest edition of the Southern Cross Newsletter, 15/06/2021

 
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Calendar Dates

WEEK 8

  • Tuesday 15th June - Year 5/6 Excursion to the Zoo 
  • Wednesday 16th June - Parents and Friends Meeting - 2.30pm
  • Thursday 17th June - Principal's tour - 9.15am
  • Friday 18th June - Community Prayer - 8.55am - 3/4CF
  • Friday 18th June  - Term 3 Receptions Transition Visit
  • Friday 18th June  - Sacrament of Confirmation  - 7pm
  • Saturday 19th June - Sacrament of First Holy Communion - 2pm

WEEK 9

  • Monday 21st June - Assembly led by 5/6C - 2.30pm
  • Wednesday 23rd June - Yr 6 Reflection Day Incursion
  • Friday 25th June - Community Prayer - 8.55am - 3/4D 
  • Friday 25th June - Year 3/4 Excursion to Monarto Zoo (E-form on Skoolbag)
  • Friday 25th June  - Term 3 Receptions Transition Visit
  • Friday 25th June - 7pm - Sacrament of Confirmation  
  • Saturday 26th June 2pm - Sacrament of First Holy Communion 

WEEK 10

  • Friday 2nd July - Community Prayer - 8.55am - 3/4ZC
  • Friday 2nd July - Term 2 ends - 3.10pm finish

FUTURE DATES

TERM 2 BEGINS - Tuesday 20th July

SCHOOL PHOTO DAY - Thursday 22nd July

 

 
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