Newsletter Week
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Week  5  -  Term  1  -  2021

 
 
 
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Kia Ora, Talofa Lava, Malo e Lelei, Bula, Namastē, Namaskar, AyubowanKia Orana, Taloha Ni, Kumusta,  Aloha Mai E, Fakaalofa Lahi Atu, ‘Alii, Malo Ni, Halo Aloketa Aloha, Nī Hāo, Sawatdeekhrap  Sabaidi, Terve, Dobradan, Bonjour, Hola, Guten Tag, Ciao, Salaam, Olā, Zdravstvuyte, Konnichiwa, Ahn Young Ha Se Yo, Hoi, Merhaba, Jambo, Yasou, Shalom, Salamat Siang, Ahoj, Xin Chāo, Sawubona, Bok, Yiassoo, Hej, Dia Dhaoibh, Cham Reap Sour, Hoi, Vanakkam.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Welcome To Newsletter Two - Week 5:

 
 
 

We are HOPING that Auckland will drop back to Alert Level 2 next week and therefore allow all children to return.

As soon as we have any news on this we will let you know.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Our Junior School Parent Evening will now be a Live-Streamed Event only. 

Under Level 2 we would be limited to how many parents could attend. 

We are also running out of time as we need to host this event before we have our Parent and Student Learning Conferences in week 7.

Our Junior School Leaders Annette Pram and Dana Taylor, along with all their teaching team, will be sharing our Play Based Learning Approach and our new Literacy approaches and initiatives.

We will save the Live-Streamed video and make that available online if you are unable to watch the Live-Stream Live. 

Those who watch it Live will be able to post questions to the Live-Stream at the end of the session.

 
 
 

Visit this link   tinyurl.com/vf6tzpz   

to follow  the Live-Stream or use your Smart-Phone on the QR code to access it that way.

Live-Stream is now THURSDAY 11 March from 6 pm to 7:30 pm. See you Live there and then.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

(Hopeful) Term One Calendar - Subject to Covid-19 Levels:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Learning Te Reo Maori with Whaea Jessie:

 
 

Teacher-On-Fire Jessie Eyre - that rhymes and I think she would like that - is passionate about teaching and passionate about Te Reo Maori, so she combined these two loves for her colleagues’ benefits. Each Wednesday (when we are not in Lockdown) we meet in our senior ILE space and Jessie leads us through Whakatauki - treasured sayings to open a lesson or day. Waiata - songs. Whakaraka - games to reinforce learning. Te Reo - the language. Tikanga and Kapa - cultural protocols.

26 of us attended her first session and it was learning at its best - fun, active, engaging and practical.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Our Mud Kitchen is Mud-vellous !:

 
 
 

A huge amount of  work has gone into this project, so seeing how much children love it is really rewarding for all involved.

Team Leaders Annette Pram and Dana Taylor are the driving forces behind this. It has been a dream of Annette’s in particular, but it only came to pass through a massive team effort.

Massive thanks to Annette, Dana, Olivia, Helen, Tiaki and the Junior School for all their hard work.

But wait - there’s more… we have plans, and we will share them soon.

 
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
   
  
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 

Upgrading Our Front of School Gardens:

 
 
 

From this - below - to this at right. Lots of bags of soil, compost and bark and 19 special Australian Grasses - they are very hardy, grow to a metre square and are a pleasing bright green.

 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 

We have plans to spruce up the other gardens too.

 
 
 
 
 

Athena - Dynamic Dancer and Beautiful Ballerina:

 
 
 

Athena is a very special young lady. She is dedicated, determined, hard-working, passionate about ballet, and fully engaged in all her learning. Just as importantly, she is kind, caring, outgoing and seems to be able to connect with anyone. She has a wonderful smile and the best manners.  Last Whanau Time we were privileged to see her perform a ballet piece. Athena trains daily and it shows. She looks set to go far and we wish her every success. Her dance can be found at the end of the latest Whanau Time video on our YouTube channel - here.  The photos below are stills from that video and not the best quality - sorry.

 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 

This Week’s Writing - Focusing on Wellbeing:

 
 
 

British Psychologists: Focus on Children’s Well-Being, Not Their Academics:

 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 

The BBC reports that the British Psychological Society warns that policymakers should emphasize children’s well-being rather than “catching up” with academics. They are concerned that children are facing too much pressure as the adults make decisions about what to do next. All schools in England are expected to open by March 8.

Dr Dan O’Hare, co-chair of the BPS division of educational and child psychology, said it was “absolutely understandable” that parents are concerned children have “been missing out on many aspects of their formal education” – but warned against setting expectations too high.

“The notion that children need to catch up or are ‘behind’ at school due to the pandemic reinforces the idea that children have ‘one shot’ at their education and puts them under even more pressure to perform academically after what has been a challenging and unprecedented time for everyone,” he told the PA News agency.


At Western Heights we strive to achieve a balance of both. By focusing on our children’s wellbeing, we are ensuring they have a much better chance of being academically successful.

 
 
 
 
 

The Importance of Play for Wellbeing and Learning at All Ages:

 
 
 
There are several kinds of play, and each makes an important contribution to children’s learning and development.


Physical play includes jumping, climbing and bike-riding. It also includes activities like colouring, sewing and cutting. Physical play supports:

  • the development of large and small muscles motor skills

  • academic progress

  • social competence

  • physical health and wellbeing

Play with objects involves hands-on, practical, sensory and emotional activity with materials such blocks, found objects and toys. It includes activities like building models and imagining scenarios. Play with objects promotes:

  • exploratory skills and discovery

  • thinking and learning by switching on the underpinning neural connections in the

  • brain

  • imagination and creativity

  • decision making and problem solving

Symbolic play involves symbols and the representational systems that make meaning such as language, music, drawing and numbers. Symbolic play encourages:

  • the use of abstract thought

  • the use of symbols which is essential for reading, writing and maths

Pretend play involves extending children’s thinking from the ‘here and now’ to imaginary situations. It uses decontextualised language, which means discussing people, places and things not immediately present. Pretend play develops:

  • abstract thinking and learning 

  • creativity and imagination 

  • language and communication skills

Games with rules include chasing games, hide-and-seek, throwing and catching, sports, board games and computer games. This kind of play develops self-regulation and executive function skills such as:

  • controlling attention 

  • suppressing impulses

  • flexibly redirecting thought and behaviour

  • working memory, or being able to rememeber and use information

How to support play

There are different categories of play:

  • Free play is independent and entirely directed by a child or group of children. 

  • Guided play involves adults joining in and acting indirectly to guide the play. It retains the child-directed nature of play but adds in gentle adult support to extend the learning opportunities of the play. For example, as children try to build a bridge from Lego which keeps collapsing, an adult could support the problem-solving process by asking children what they have already tried, and what they might try next. This kind of support might enable children to engage in longer periods of play and exploration.

You can support your children’s play in a number of ways.

  • Make sure your child has time for unstructured play, enough time to get engrossed in their play and investigations. Trust children to be capable and creative enough to find and create interests and activities. Offer attention, encouragement and praise without being overly directive of their play.

  • Find interesting play materials. Look out for ordinary, everyday, open-ended materials that can be used in various ways and easily transformed with a child’s imagination to suit their interests, skills and ideas. You probably have lots of different things you can use around the house such as wooden spoons and saucepans, found objects like shells, pebbles and leaves, upcycled objects such as tiles, buttons and ribbons, as well as staples such as papers, blocks and figurines. Very simple materials are best for stimulating imaginative and sophisticated play.

  • Extend your child’s play ideas. For example, you might extend paper plane making by suggesting children experiment with different adherents such as tape, glue or staples to discover the impact on flight. Assume a role in children’s play (for example, be the patient while the child plays doctor) to elaborate and extend on activities and language or introduce new tools and materials.
  • Provoke children to plan or reflect on their play actions. For example, if a child says they are building a bridge, ask questions such as ‘Can you tell me why you need a bridge here?’ and ‘What blocks will you need?’, ‘How will you arrange them?’ Ask ‘how is it going?’, ‘what do you need to do next?’, or ‘how else might you do it?’

 
 
 
 

Dr Vicki Hargraves

Vicki is a teacher, mother, writer, and researcher living in Marlborough. She recently completed her PhD using philosophy to explore creative approaches to understanding early childhood education. She is inspired by the wealth of educational research that is available and is passionate about making this available and useful for teachers.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Celebrating the Ideas of Sir Ken Robinson:

 
 
 

Sadly Sir Ken Robinson passed away last August. 

Sir Ken was a British author, speaker and international advisor on education in the arts to government, non-profits, education and arts bodies. He was director of the Arts in Schools Project (1985–89) and Professor of Arts Education at the University of Warwick (1989–2001), and Professor Emeritus after leaving the university. 

In 2003 he was knighted for services to the arts.

His writings and presentations on the importance of focusing on creativity rather than testing children into submission and despair have had a big impact on me.

I had the awesome privilege of speaking with him at an International Principals’ Conference some years ago - shameless self promotion picture at right.

 
 
  
 
   
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

This Week’s Catch-Ups, Reminders and Notices:

 
 
 
 
   
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 

2021 School Year Dates:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

This Week’s Life Hack:

 
 
 
 
 
   
  
   
 
 
 
 

Thursday's Thought:

 
   
   
  
 
   
  
 
 
 
 
 

This Week’s Humour:

 
 
 
 
   
   
   
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 

Western Heights School

126 Sturges Road

Henderson

Auckland 0612

P -  09 8361213

E -  macash@mac.com

M - 021 779 009

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