Newsletter Week
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Week  7  -  Term  1  -  2021

 
 
 
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Visit    tinyurl.com/vf6tzpz   

to follow  Whanau Time live. 

 
 
 
 
 
 

WHS YouTube  with 109 school videos https://goo.gl/OECvhD

 
 
 
 
 
 

Click on the Calendar icon for our Live Community Calendar

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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 Three - Week 7:

 
 
 

This Tuesday 16 March is Learning Conferences Day at Western Heights School. Conferences run from 8am to 7:30pm.

School is CLOSED on Tuesday as teachers simply cannot care for and teach children while also hosting up to 30 Learning Conferences during the day.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

We agree the timing is terrible with Covid-19 Lockdowns. We had to set this date early in the term and fit a host of other events and non-negotiable around it. 

This is a really important opportunity to build closer relationships between children, teachers and parents. We believe it is vital that we see every parent and so we have done everything we can to make it as easy as possible. For this reason parents can choose whether to have child’s learning conference face to face here at school or Live via whereby.com (like Zoom).

Please may sure you book and by doing so, demonstrate to your child how much you value their learning.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Remembering Our Fallen Kiwi Whanau - Al Noor and LIC:

 
 
 

As-salamu alaykum

Two years ago a very sad thing happened at Al Noor Mosque  and the Linwood Islamic Centre in Christchurch.

People had gone there to pray and that afternoon a man who was very mentally unwell took the lives of 51 peaceful people.

We asked everyone in our school to stand in silence for one minute to remember our fellow Kiwis whose lives were taken that day.

We welcomed our community via Facebook to also  join us at 2pm today.

It is a reminder to us to be kind, to speak kind words, and to treat everyone as important, beautiful and special.

We are all Whanau.

Kia ora koutou and Salaam.

Peace to us all.

As always, thank you for your understanding and support.

 
 
   
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 

Creative, Co-operative Play at Western Heights School:

 
 

Thank you to all those who viewed our Junior School Parent Evening Play and Pedagogy Presentation - that’s a lot of words for an event title. Our video posted to both Facebook sites and our YouTube channel gained over 700 views. That is exceptionally positive community engagement and we thank you sincerely for your interest and support.

Huge thanks to Annette Pram, Dana Taylor and Nicole Nicholson for their videos. They were researched and reflective and demonstrate an exceptional depth of knowledge and passion for what they do and WHY they do it.

Our Junior school children are in great hands - as are all our children to be honest.

 
 
 
Junior School Creative Play Experiences - March 2021
 
 
 
 
 
 

WHS School Cross Country Events:

 
 
 

Our Western Heights School Cross Country for the Middle and Senior School is going to be held on Tuesday 30th March. This will take place after morning tea at 11am.

The children will be running in their age groups as at their age on the 5th of May. This is because they have to run in the correct age for Zone Cross Country which is on this date. We will start with the 7-year-old age group first. There are separate girls and boys events. Zone Cross Country is only for 8-year-olds and up, there is no 7-year-old age group.

Please make sure that the children are dressed in appropriate clothing for running such as running shoes, shorts, and a t-shirt. Running shoes are a must for Years 3-6 as they will be running on the surrounding streets of the School.

If we are in Level 1, we would love to see you come along and support the children.

Nuree Greenhalgh and Tim Taura

 Sports Coordinators 


PS - due to Covid-19 we didnt have a school cross country last year so these are sample pics from 2019 - at right.

 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 

Congratulations to our New Student Councillors:

 
 
 

Being selected for our School Council is an honour. These children play an important role in our school as Ambassadors for our School and our Values. They share ideas and come up with initiatives to make our school better for everyone.

There are plans to extend their role into brand new territory this year - more news on that soon.

Meanwhile, our warmest congratulations to these very fine students - we are proud of you all.

From Back Left:    Zaima, Aleena, Jazzy, Timo, Grace, Ella

From Front Left:   Toby, Madison, Abi, Ella, Catarina, Cristina, Gareth

Missing:  Crispy and Emily (photo next week for them).

 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 

Art Week Is Coming to WHS Next Term:

 
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Purpose:

To share “The Arts” with our families and community at Western Heights including visual arts, dance, music and drama. To include local artistics to share with our students their talents and giftings. A time to celebrate the amazing artwork, dance and music talent we have at Western Heights. The theme for the event will be Matariki as we celebrate as a community of New Zealanders.

Why “The Arts”

Working in the arts helps learners to develop creative problem-solving skills. Teaching through the arts can present difficult concepts visually, making them more easy to understand. Art instruction helps children with the development of motor skills, language skills, social skills, decision-making, risk-taking, and inventiveness. Integrating art with other disciplines reaches students who might not otherwise be engaged in classwork. Arts experiences boost critical thinking, teaching students to take the time to be more careful and thorough in how they observe the world. Art education connects students with their own culture as well as with the wider world.

 
 
 

Date 

Term 2, Week 5 - Tuesday 1 June  to Friday 4 June 2021 from 11 am to 3 pm. Students will be with their own teacher for the morning block, class as normal.

Term 2, Week 6 - Thursday 10 June. Art display and performances with local artists demonstrations and stalls. 

Part 1: A Week of Art

Students will be split into groups depending on their interests from Year 0 to 6. Each teacher will choose from an area of “The Arts” to work on during the week. By the end of the week either each child, group of students or class will have something to share for the art show the following Thursday.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Aleena Continues to Shine:

 
 
 

Aleena has now completed her Trinity College London Grade Three Piano exam.

Unsurprisingly, Aleena achieved 

Level 1 Award in

Graded Examination in Music Performance

With Merit.

 
 
 
 
 

Congratulations to ex student Maia Masters who was Junior Athletics Day Champion at Waitakere College this year.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Walk To school Day - Wednesday 24 March - Join In:

 
 
 

The annual ‘Walk to School Day’ returns for the second time ever on 24 March 2021. Join other parents and school students of all ages as we make a change to get more active in the mornings and afternoons and walk to and from school. Whether you walk as a family or as a group of mates, whether you walk all of the way or part of the way, whether you walk or ride – give it a try.


 
 
   
  
 
 

Join the fun

  • Children learn more by walking to school – they discover their environment and all the magic that brings. They learn about road safety and skills for independence
  • Walking the kids to school is a special time for parents – It’s a time you will both always remember
  • Walking to school means your children get more exercise
  • Whether you walk, ride or scoot to school, it’s a lot more enjoyable than sitting in a traffic jam.

Do the right thing

  • Lead by example and be sustainable - a simple step can lead to a big change. Every time you walk instead of driving helps the environment
  • Let’s work towards safer communities and Auckland Transport's Vision Zero goal. Every car off the road increases the safety of children walking to school
  • Help clear up the congestion around school gates and leave the car at home.

Learn more about road safety around schools to make sure everybody stays safe.

 
 
  
 
 

A Few Facts and Figures 

Every week close to 760,000 school-aged kids walk, ride, take a ferry, are driven or drive themselves to school around New Zealand.

How they get there depends on proximity to school, the age, stage and attitude of the child and the safety of the route.

Walking to school comes with the most advantages from obvious health benefits, easing traffic congestion and reducing carbon emissions.

Data from Figure NZ drawn from the 2018 Census shows the majority of children in New Zealand - close to 40 per cent - are driven to school.

In comparison around 20 per cent of Kiwi kids walk to school.

In Auckland, more than half of the 260,000 children who travel to school each day go by car.

 
 
 
 
 
 

This Week’s Writing - Reading to Your Child:

 
 
 

What's Going On In Your Child's Brain When You Read Them A Story?

 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 

"I want The Three Bears!”


These days parents, caregivers and teachers have lots of options when it comes to fulfilling that request. You can read a picture book, put on a cartoon, play an audiobook, or even ask Alexa.


A newly published study gives some insight into what may be happening inside young children's brains in each of those situations. And, says lead author Dr. John Hutton, there is an apparent "Goldilocks effect" — some kinds of storytelling may be "too cold" for children, while others are "too hot." And, of course, some are "just right.”


Hutton is a researcher and pediatrician at Cincinnati Children's Hospital with a special interest in "emergent literacy" — the process of learning to read.


For the study, 27 children around age 4 went into an FMRI machine. They were presented with stories in three conditions: audio only; the illustrated pages of a storybook with an audio voiceover; and an animated cartoon. All three versions came from the Web site of Canadian author Robert Munsch.


While the children paid attention to the stories, the MRI, the machine scanned for activation within certain brain networks, and connectivity between the networks.


"We went into it with an idea in mind of what brain networks were likely to be influenced by the story," Hutton explains. One was language. One was visual perception. The third is called visual imagery. The fourth was the default mode network, which Hutton calls, "the seat of the soul, internal reflection — how something matters to you.”


The default mode network includes regions of the brain that appear more active when someone is not actively concentrating on a designated mental task involving the outside world.


In terms of Hutton's "Goldilocks effect," here's what the researchers found:

In the audio-only condition (too cold): language networks were activated, but there was less connectivity overall. "There was more evidence the children were straining to understand.”


In the animation condition (too hot): there was a lot of activity in the audio and visual perception networks, but not a lot of connectivity among the various brain networks. "The language network was working to keep up with the story," says Hutton. "Our interpretation was that the animation was doing all the work for the child. They were expending the most energy just figuring out what it means." The children's comprehension of the story was the worst in this condition.


The illustration condition was what Hutton called "just right”.


When children could see illustrations, language-network activity dropped a bit compared to the audio condition. Instead of only paying attention to the words, Hutton says, the children's understanding of the story was "scaffolded" by having the images as clues.


"Give them a picture and they have a cookie to work with," he explains. "With animation it's all dumped on them all at once and they don't have to do any of the work.”


Most importantly, in the illustrated book condition, researchers saw increased connectivity between — and among — all the networks they were looking at: visual perception, imagery, default mode and language.


"For 3- to 5-year-olds, the imagery and default mode networks mature late, and take practice to integrate with the rest of the brain," Hutton explains. "With animation you may be missing an opportunity to develop them.”


When we read to our children, they are doing more work than meets the eye. "It's that muscle they're developing bringing the images to life in their minds.”


Hutton's concern is that in the longer term, "kids who are exposed to too much animation are going to be at risk for developing not enough integration.”


Overwhelmed by the demands of processing language, without enough practice, they may also be less skilled at forming mental pictures based on what they read, much less reflecting on the content of a story. This is the stereotype of a "reluctant reader" whose brain is not well-versed in getting the most out of a book.


One interesting note is that, because of the constraints of an MRI machine, which encloses and immobilizes your body, the story-with-illustrations condition wasn't actually as good as reading on Mom or Dad's lap.


The emotional bonding and physical closeness, Hutton says, were missing. So were the exchanges known as "dialogic reading," where caregivers point out specific words or prompt children to "show me the cat?" in a picture. "That's a whole other layer," of building reading Hutton says.


In an ideal world, you would always be there to read to your child. The results of this small, preliminary study also suggest that, when parents do turn to electronic devices for young children, they should gravitate toward the most stripped-down version of a narrated, illustrated ebook, as opposed to either audio-only or animation.


By Anya Kamenetz.

          

 
 
 
 
 

The “So That…”  Test:

 
 
 

Have you heard of the “So That” Test?

If you haven’t heard of it, then these two words might just change your ambitions, or possibly your life.

Right now, think of something you want from your life: A loving spouse, wealth, healthy children, work success; it doesn’t matter what it is, just think of something.

Got it?

 
 
   
  
 
 

Let’s say you want to become wealthy. Why? No one wants green paper just to collect it.

It’s time to take the “So That” test.

You want to become wealthy so that

You can buy your children what they need to flourish.

So that

Your children will grow up to reach their full potential.

By questioning your goals, you uncover your true motives. By uncovering your true motives, you realise there are alternate routes to reaching those goals.

Maybe you don’t enjoy work, and it would be more worthwhile to exchange your overtime earnings for quality time with your children. Quality time that is far more valuable to their development than a little more money.

You might also discover that you enjoy this time with your children much more than working overtime.

By applying the “So That” test, you can discover paths to your goals that you had never thought existed.

Always question your motives.

You spend a lifetime pursuing them, so why not a few minutes to make sure you're going in the right direction?

So that”… The rest is up to you.

 
 
 
 
 

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

 
 
 
 
   
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Eco Corner:

 
 
 
 
 
   
  
 
 
 
 
 

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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admin@westernheights.school.nz

 
 
 
 
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Ash Maindonald

Principal

 
 
 

Thank you for reading our newsletter.

Thank you for supporting our awesome school and wonderful teachers.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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