Glenaeon Newsletter 28 February 2019

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Is the Pen Mightier than the Keyboard?

A recent article in the Macquarie University journal The Lighthouse was a welcome reminder of how some of the basics in education are still valued. Having times tables by heart, and writing with cursive handwriting, are two of the tried and true skills that Class Teachers in our school teach with great conviction.

These days there are many pressures on teachers and students to rely only on calculators and keyboards for both. Why bother when technology makes it so easy?

Instinctively you can see the importance of both: times tables are the foundation of number combinations in good numeracy, and cursive handwriting unites head and hand to promote conscious learning, with heart in there as well in the beauty of a good script.

Recent research now shows that students who cursive handwrite their material have better retention than those who type on a keyboard, whether tablet or laptop. We have always believed that whole child learning is healthy learning: head, heart and hand in combination unite the whole human being, still the foundation of our education, and in this article persuasively argued by Macquarie University.

 “If you’re behaving like a Hansard reporter and trying to get down every single word, the actual cognitive processing of the content is a distraction from that. If you handwrite your lecture notes, you’re having to think more deeply about what you’re writing down, to process what are the main points as you go, because you physically can’t write fast enough.”

French says that ultimately there will be a range of choices about how to compose written texts that would have been unimagined in the 19th century, when cursive writing’s main purpose, in those pre-ballpoint-pen days,was to avoid ink blots from lifting the pen.

“My question around the future of cursive would be, do you want to take away those choices? I like having a range of choices,” French says.

“We don’t want to be just the subject of technology and dependent on it for everything. We want to be able to scribble a note on a post-it note when we’re on a telephone, and not have to open our computer first.”

Click SHOW MORE to read the article below... 

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Parent Craft

Parent Craft is underway again and this week, parents were wet felting Cherry Pip Healing bags with craft master Yuki Tomishima, and healing angel Lyn Clifton. They'll be finishing them off next Monday as per the Parent Craft calendar (see below).

 

Castlecrag news

This week the Class One parents have been busy making wheat packs for the children to wear around their necks when they are feeling delicate at school. The wheat packs can also be heated up in winter if the children have coughs and colds. It will be such a gift to get 10 beautiful new felted wheat packs with beautiful silk cases. Thank you so much class parents!

Sonny, our maintenance person has also been working here putting lattice on the lower part of the gates to stop the children climbing on them and bending the hinges. Hopefully none of our children have legs long enough to climb on the gates now.

Finally Sandra, our gardening teacher spent a quiet moment in the kindy playground with our special school guardians keeping watch.

Class Two in the garden

Class 2 were out in the garden this week, planting Crozium bulbs in the newly composted soil and February 2019 super moon rain.


Class Three news

As well as being encouraged to play outside in the rain at lunch, some students can choose to stay inside to play... also a wonderful experience as shown here by this amazing kapla block tower and marble run.

Class 3 Old Testament main lesson

Class 3’s first Main Lesson emerged from stories from the Old Testament. They drew, painted and made wax models of the images from the stories, as well as embarking on their first cursive writing main lesson, exploring literacy, sentence structure and spelling. 

As Class 3 teacher Katherine Arconati explains: “The stories from Hebrews form the beginning of the Waldorf Curriculum’s journey through the epochs of human consciousness. During the year of turning nine, the children experience the first glimmerings of the awakening self toward individuality and self-responsibility. Their world starts to broaden and their own inner world begins to develop more. The Hebrew story of creation meets an inner need for the children, who hear that there is a spiritual force behind this world that they are just beginning to feel as separate from themselves. They begin to sense that the world spread out before them conceals a great mystery and, at the same time, they inwardly sense that their own life is imbued with divine wisdom, with spirituality. A mirroring of their own unfolding development is felt in the story of Adam and Eve, the loss of Paradise and the setting off on a new journey that may be long and difficult. This sense of separation is further reflected as the Jewish peoples later search for their own identity and place of dwelling in the world.”

Each year, the Steiner curriculum main lessons focus on greater themes and epochs, exploring some of the literary, artistic, scientific, mathematical and historical aspects of each theme. The epochs are chosen to also reflect the stages of inner development of the children in their own journey and age. In primary school they will go on to study Norse Mythology during Class 4, India, Persia & Greece during Class 5 and Rome during Class 6.

 

Class 4 learning to make runes

Class 4 are studying Norse Myths this term and learning about sailing on Viking ships and making their very own runes.

Class Five India main lesson

As Class 5 complete their India Main Lesson this week, there are classroom displays of some of the beautiful work from this term. They are still working on the Indian performance and feast to be held at the end of this term. 

Sinfonietta visit Kamaroi

The Sinfonietta ventured beyond the leafy boundaries of Glenaeon this week and headed to the leafy boundaries of Kamaroi Steiner School in Belrose. Many of our High School students come to Glenaeon from Kamaroi and so there were some nice reunions and cries from the teachers there of 'My, how you've grown!'

The Sinfonietta presented a varied program of orchestral music and some solos by members of the orchestra. The Kamaroi students from Classes 3-6 were a model audience and would have put the average Opera House crowd to shame with their silent and appreciative attention!

The staff at Kamaroi were very pleased with our visit and would like us to come again to interact with the music students there.

Christian Lillicrap
Faculty Supervisor Music 

Class 6 rainy day games

With the number of rainy days recently, Class 6, with teacher Rodney Dean, have invented an indoor game called Dinghies and Dingoes! It is a an alphabetical board game version of snakes and ladders, played with multi-sided alphabetical dice. Great indoor lunch-time fun.

Year Cockatoo Island art excursion

Year 11 Visual Art students spent the day on Cockatoo Island recently, participating in a drawing workshop with Michael Herron. With a focus on artist's practice, the aim is for students to develop a body of work - drawings and paintings that respond to the rich history of Cockatoo Island and the wonderful harbour views.

Basketball news

I took 31 enthusiastic basketballers from Yr 7- Yr 10 some of them very new to the school, to Bankstown Basketball Stadium to compete against 10 other schools for basketball glory.

We had two junior teams and two senior teams and the girls senior team (15 and older) made it to the finals! There they lost against the very sport oriented Reddam House school but not without a fight! The girls team was brilliantly led by Lola Milman who was responsible for many of the points scored during the group matches.

The junior girls team also competed well and between both teams they had six wins and three losses.

The boys’ teams did well too but competition was tough. The juniors almost made it to the finals, at the end just one point separated them from glory!

Our very own Glenaeon basketball team, The Chill, was fully represented at making up the majority of the senior boys team. They fought hard and scored some great points but ultimately the quality of other teams at that level was very high.

Everyone enjoyed an immensely exhausting day away from the classroom and in a classroom were other things were learned too: how to operate in a team, how to effectively communicate, how to deal with loss, how to be gracious in a win, how to do the bench and note down fouls and points on score sheets, how to look out for one another in a very busy stadium, how to stay motivated when the body wants to give in from exhaustion and how good it feels to be part of a team!

I want to congratulate all and every individual player who made it to the courts with little or huge experience and for giving their all and successfully operating in teams – well done again Glenaeon!!!

Year 11 bee watchers

Year 11 looking for the previously tagged Tetragona carbonaria native bees in the Glenaeon glowing garden.

Shuttle bus success

The new early shuttle bus to Castlecrag is a huge success. Katherine Arconati instigated an early shuttle bus as there were so many Class 3 children who could be picked up at Castlecrag instead of Middle Cove. Eighteen children are supervised to the bus and have left Glenroy Ave at 3.10pm, even before other children have finished class. The result is a much smoother pick-up zone with less traffic... that's 18 fewer families picking up! The school is looking into other options for increasing shuttle buses or different walking buses as was discussed at the recent GPA meeting... and yes, (!) the children sit properly on the bus, unlike in this photo before the bus had left!!

HSC Visual Art student request

Hi, my name is Abbey and I am producing a major project for Year 12 Visual Art and I am asking people from the school community if they can donate fashion magazines and barbie dolls. My work is looking at how female body image is impacted by popular culture and those two things are playing a key role in how I will explore this idea. 

Thank you, Abbey Hardwick

abbeyhardwick646@gmail.com

0403 597 883 


Supporting respectful relationships through a better understanding of child development

With Susan Laing

When you meet your children with insight and compassion, when you accept that their troubled behaviours are ‘cries for help’ which need attending to,when you truly meet their individual and developmental needs, you are creating the foundation for mutually respectful relationships. This is a complex task because children’s needs are constantly changing according to their age and circumstances— for example, what environment most nurtures healthy growth, what approaches to parental authority are appropriate, and what responses to challenging behaviours are most helpful as they grow older. There is no one rule that fits all. This talk looks at some helpful approaches based on research into child development and behaviours at different stages of childhood.

NOTE: ALL 'Glenaeon Parent Education' sessions are FREE of charge. We welcome parents to join in, learn and participate. Occasionally there is a nominal fee for craft materials which will be advised beforehand.

DATE AND TIME 
Friday 15 March 9:15am

Marion Mahony Griffin Hall
Castlecrag campus, 121 Edinburgh Road

BOOKINGS AND ENQUIRIES
Castlecrag office: 9958 0774
castlecrag@glenaeon.nsw.edu.au

Please RSVP for The Four Pillars of Simplicity Parenting Saturday March 23 2 - 5pm

with Mary Heard

NOTE: It's not too late to contact Mary to let her know you are coming on Saturday. maryheardwhat@gmail.com, or call the Castlecrag office on 99580774. 

Highly recommended by Glenaeon parents, this free three-hour workshop looks at how to declutter our family lives. You choose what you want to keep and what you want to get rid of and this way we will create our homes as places of rest and rejuvenation, ‘sanctuaries’ from a fast-paced world that is overwhelming adults and robbing children of their childhood. We become the architects of our family life as we realign with our own values and choose what is workable for our families and so create an ideal environment for the slow emergence of our children’s identities, resilience and well-being. Please click below for more information.

 

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Glenaeon School Tours

Glenaeon School Tours & Enrolment Events

MIDDLE COVE CAMPUS (CLASSES 3 – 12)

Middle Cove Tour 
Wednesday 8 May 2019 – 9:30am-11:30am

CASTLECRAG CAMPUS (CLASSES K-2)
Castlecrag School Tour
Thursday 21 March– 9:30am-11:30am

PRESCHOOL CAMPUS
Willoughby Preschool Tour
Thursday 23 May 2019 - 9:30am - 11:30am

For further information or questions please contact our Registrar on 02 9932 2325 or email enrolments@glenaeon.nsw.edu.au


Grassroots Eco Store – Free Sonett Liquid Hand Soap

Have you tried using Sonett products in your home yet? Now is your chance to try them and receive a complimentary Calendula liquid hand soap with every bottle of 1 litre Sonett purchased, of any type, until stocks last. A portion of every sale goes to support Glenaeon. I appreciate your visits and support and hope to see you in the store soon. To shop at any other time please call me on 0416 035 173. Please let me know if there are any products you'd like to see in the store and I'll try to source them for you. Warmly, Felicity
Open on the Castlecrag Campus during school terms:
Monday: open by request
Tuesday: 8.45am—11.30am
Wednesday: 8.45am—3.15pm
Thursday: 8.30am—10.30am
Friday: 2.30pm—4.00pm 
Click below to read about Sonett and Felicity's complimentary liquid hand soap.

 

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Bubblewrap to go

I have a large quantity of bubble wrap and cardboard / cardboard boxes to give to anyone who can use it.

Please contact Julie Monteban – 9932 2356 musicadministrator@glenaeon.nsw.edu.au to arrange collection.

Mandarin, French and German groups after school

There are currently 3 language groups held after school by private groups/tutors. Mandarin and French are held on campus, and a small privately organised class in German is held in a home in Neutral Bay. Mandarin students have had a wonderful term, and had this to say about it!

Sofia Year 9 : "Mandarin classes are a lot of fun! We study both the language and history of Chinese, as well as the culture (myths, traditions, celebrations..). We even get to try traditional Chinese food! We practise both speaking and writing, as well as learning about the origin of each character. 
The teacher is very friendly and has a detailed, easy-to-follow teaching style. I highly recommend this class to everyone who is interested!"  
Cory Year 9 :"Our classes cover a  wide range of topics that go from the history of China to the myths and legends and the ways of writing, speaking and the meaning of the Chinese characters. The teacher herself is very friendly and has a teaching method that is easy to follow. Overall, I enjoy learning Mandarin." 
Lily Year 5 : "For me, learning Mandarin is a bit challenge but fun."  

Please CLICK below for more information on all language class times, locations, contact details and prices.

 

 

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Subject tutoring available

Maths and English Tutor available:  High School up to HSC by teacher Neil Anderson (Bachelor of Education (Hons): English, Master of Education (Distinction): Mathematics, Master of Linguistics:  Literacy, Phd in Theatre (in progress) .
Mobile  0404382192   Email: russelife03@gmail.com

Maths Tutor available:  Hi, my name is Chiara,
I am a year 11 student at Glenaeon and am available for maths tutoring for students up to Year 11. My rates are very reasonable and I'm flexible with tutoring times. I can supply references from my teachers if required. For further enquiries please contact me on calmdotti@gmail.com

The Christian Community​

The Christian Community​...a movement for the renewal of the religious impulse in humanity, founded out of the spiritual scientific work of Rudolf Steiner. Please click below for information about their playgroup, youth group, services, talks and events that are coming up. 
To us it is given at no stage ever to rest. There live and there strive active human beings from life to life, as plants grow aloft from springtime to springtime. Ever raising themselves, through error upward to truth, through fetters upward to freedom, through sickness and death upward to beauty, to health and to life.’ Rudolf Steiner

 

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Yoga Classes held at Glenaeon

WEDNESDAY MORNING ON THE SYLVIA BROSE HALL DECK OR ANNEXE IN RAINY WEATHER (MIDDLE COVE CAMPUS):
Come and experience what half an hour of yoga can do for you to start your day. Held on the deck of the hall, overlooking the bush, this class is restorative and rejuvenating. Children welcome to attend this class. See image below.

SATURDAY MORNING IN THE MARION MAHONEY GRIFFIN HALL (CASTLECRAG CAMPUS)
Ki seasonal yoga with Lisa Kavanagh; also Wednesday mornings in the Uniting Church Hall in Charles St (near Castlecrag Campus). 

Please click to see images below of yoga classes an times.

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Room Required for Teacher-in-Training

Jessica Ortlepp joins the Sydney Rudolf Steiner College from the Sunshine Coast where she balances full-time work and does part-time study. Jessica is undertaking our distance teacher training course and is in her second year of a Bachelor of Education (Primary) at Curtin University. Jessica enjoys the great outdoors (walks on the beach, hikes in the hinterland and scuba diving), meditation, time with family and friends, and travelling. Jessica is in her late 30s and is comfortable with pets. She can house sit and is responsible. She needs a place to stay whilst studying to become a Steiner teacher that’s close to the Castlecrag campus from April 14-18th and Sept 30th-Oct 4th. Please email Jessica on j_ortlepp@hotmail.com, if you can help.

Waldorf – Family Exchange in Berlin (Germany) October - December 2019

 

Hi, we are a family with two children, Katja (7th grade, born 2006) and Janna (3rd grade, born 2009). We would like to have a family exchange with a family for one to three months at the end of the year. By 'exchange' we mean the exchange of school places and apartments. Regarding the exact time period we are flexible and gladly accept suggestions. Our mission is to improve our English language skills and to experience a different culture.

Our Family

My wife Miriam (43) is a speech therapist and is finishing her studies. We want to use the interim period (until her job starts) for a stay abroad. I (47) am a freelance computer scientist.

Our School (www.waldorfschule-am-prenzlauer-berg.de)

Our school was founded in 2006 by an initiative of parents, because the demand for Waldorf school places in Berlin became too big. The school is one form entry, from the 1st to the 12th grade. In each class are about 28 students.
The school is located in the trendy district of Prenzlauer Berg, not far from East Berlin city center (Alexanderplatz). The building is a typical school building from the 70s, which has been lovingly restored. A building for the after-school childcare was built two years ago. This year, the schoolyard will be redesigned.

Email: alex@kuzmanovski.de

Our Apartment

We live in a multi-family house in the district of Pankow which is very popular for families. It is situated near the outskirts of the city and yet close to the center (7.5 km, 20 minutes by public transport). You do not need a car in Berlin. You can get everywhere by bike or by public transport. The other families in the house are very helpful and in friendly terms with us. A 3 min. walk will get you to “Schlosspark” with meadows, playgrounds and a little castle. A supermarket and a shopping street are also within walking distance.

View: Google Maps
Location: Google Maps
The school can be reached by car in 20-30 minutes, by bike in 35 minutes and by public transport in 45 minutes (Google Maps).

Apartment Features:
Our apartment has a children's room, a living room, a bed- and studyroom, a kitchen and a bathroom.

We hope that we could arouse your interest. Just call (+49 176 271 583 57) or send us an email (alex@kuzmanovski.de) if you need more information. We are pleased to meet you.

Janna, Katja, Miriam & Alexandar

 


Rudolf Steiner House

Sydney Rudolf Stiener House has ongoing talks and courses that are available, from short talks, to discussion evenings, workshops and members meetings. If you would like to contact Sydney Rudolf Steiner College about any of our courses or other information:   Address: 307 Sussex Street Sydney   Phone: +61 2 9261 4001 Email: admin@sydneyrudolfsteinercollege.com   Click below to see what the calendar looks like for the next few months, Warm regards, Anett:

CLICK HERE

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School canteen

The school canteen operates at the Middle Cove campus for Years 3-12. You can also find the menus on the School Stream app, on Instagram and on the school's Facebook page.

To sign up to volunteer for a shift at the canteen, open Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, go to https://signup.zone/glenaeon-canteen, and pick a shift that works for you. Hours are 9am-1pm and your child eats free on the day you are working! It’s fun and interesting to talk, cook and enjoy the bush setting we are surrounded by, come check it out! And you'll meet our resident kookaburras (see below!) Warm regards, Sharon & Lorna

School canteen menu for next week. 

Click below to see how to order lunches for C3-6.

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Lost property

The homes of many miscellaneous items are a mystery to us here at reception as we receive daily gifts collected from around the school that students have misplaced or left behind.

An ever growing mountain of hats, jackets, pencil cases, odd shoes, glasses, watches, lunches boxes and water bottles, to name a few, are brought to reception until hopefully the owner comes to take them back home. We wonder who is walking around with one shoe or missing their prescription glasses.

With any items that have names on them that we can read we happily ensure they return back to the student via the morning rolls or by spotting the student walk by reception. It’s like a satisfying arcade game getting items back into the right hands.

We keep any lost property with us at reception for 1-3 weeks before the pile is out of control (and smelly) and it is moved down to our 2nd Hand Uniform Shop where the lovely Thomas in Year 12 sorts through it and keeps what he can before sending it either to an Op Shop or landfill at the end of each term.

It’s great working in a community that is conscious of our collective carbon footprint but perhaps lost property is going unnoticed and we’d like to do something to change that.

-       Stitch or permanent marker your child’s name onto their belongings. This way once it ends up in our hands we can hand it back. Especially lunch boxes and water bottles!

-       Come check out our lost property on the days the uniform shop is open. You may have lost something and not even have realised!

-       Encourage your children if they have lost something to come ask us at reception if it has made its way to us.

If anyone else has any great initiatives to help our lost property carbon footprint lessen then please email reception@glenaeon.nsw.edu.au

Thank you!

World's Greatest Shave - Chloe Madigan

Hi, I am Chloe. I am in year 10 at Glenaeon and am taking part in the World's Greatest Shave for the Leukaemia Foundation! I'm on a mission to shave the world from blood cancer. Please sponsor me to give families facing blood cancer the emotional and practical support they need. You'll also fund vital research to help more people survive blood cancers, while improving their quality of life.

Every day another 35 Australians are diagnosed with a blood cancer. That's one Aussie every 41 minutes. Although research is improving survival, sadly an Australian loses their life to blood cancer every two hours. Will you help by sponsoring me? Any amount, big or small will be appreciated!

Sponsor me today by going to https://worldsgreatestshave.com click on "sponsor" and type in Chloe Madigan. 

Thanks for your support
Chloe

 

 

A fitting tribute to a special lady

Rose Hazlewood was a school crossing lady for 25 years in Willoughby and was a long-time flyer distributor for Glenaeon.

A plaque was recently installed beside "Rose's Crossing" this week, a constant reminder of the care that Rose Hazlewood had for students over the 25 years she worked tirelessly as crossing attendant on High Street.

Photo credit: Gail Gidney

 

Change of Date for the Second Hand Uniform Shop

Just a quick note to say that the Second Hand Uniform Shop will now be open every 2nd THURSDAY afternoon instead of Friday. The time will remain the same, open from 3.00 - 3:45pm. This is due to timetable clashes for the convenors and we hope this will not cause any inconvenience. The amended dates of the Uniform Shop for Term 1 are: Thursday, 28 March and Thursday, 4 April. Click below to see how your purchases help others...

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