Number 32 15/10/2014 Dates to Note Assembly – Friday 17th October 1 Giallouris – 9.15am Halloween Mufti Day (free dress) Thursday 30th October - Gold Coin Donation - Canteen Halloween Specials. Professional Development Day Friday 31st Oct (student free day) Assembly – Friday 14th November 1 Collins – 9.15am Christmas with Friends Concert (Parap’s Got Talent) Friday 5th December Chief Minister and Value Awards Assembly – Monday 8th December 9.00am Year 6 Graduation – Wednesday 10th December From the Principal Dear Parents/ Caregivers, PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT DAY – Friday 31st October I would like to remind parents that this is a student free day. Our Outside School Hours Care provider, CAMP AUSTRALIA, will be operating on Friday 31st October for parents who wish to book their children into their program. The service will be open from 7.30 until 6 p.m. Please contact them on 1300 105 343. DARWIN REGION SWIMMING SPORTS This Thursday evening our Parap Primary Swimming Squad will be competing in the Darwin Region Swimming Carnival. This event will be held at Casuarina Pool from 4.30 to 9.00 p.m. This will be a very enjoyable evening and all school community members are invited to come along to support our wonderful students. Year 6 Farewell – Thursday 11th December Our School Mission Contact Us Working Together, nurturing personal achievement and life-long learning in a learner-centered environment, sustained by explicit values and strong school, family and community partnerships. Urquhart Street, Parap PO Box 69 Parap NT 0804 Phone: 8982 2922 Fax: 8982 2911 Web: www.schools.nt.edu.au/parap Email: parapps.office@ntschools.net Our School Values Integrity, Responsibility, Excellence and Doing our Best, Respect, Care and Compassion and Collaborative Learning. Our team members are; Jade Lay, Camryn Stacey, Ashlee Cavanough, Cara Doherty, Fisher Harris, Diarmid Browne, Muchalinda Crawford, Tess Jungfer, Hannes Dielenberg, Ben Kronk, Zita Varatharajan, Chloe Everingham, Mitchell Turner, Rosanna Materazzo, Mark Bawden-Hill, Laleeta Das, Jozsef Everingham, Ben Lambert, Ian Orr, Meg Marker, Indi Evans, Bernie Dunn, Kada Hutt, Jacob Lay, Maggie O’Loughlin and Andrew Materazzo . TOURNAMENT OF MINDS – AUSTRALASIAN/ PACIFIC FINALS Last Saturday our two teams spent all day preparing for the finals competition. They were given challenges and locked down while they worked on the solution. It was fantastic to observe the presentations by the four NT representative teams. The skill, enthusiasm, knowledge and enjoyment portrayed by all teams were amazing and inspiring. On Thursday 16th October our two winning teams travel to Melbourne to compete in the Australasian/ Pacific finals. They will be staying with the teams from Darwin Middle and Kormilda as the NT representative teams. The opening ceremony is on Friday morning followed by a survivor challenge at the Melbourne Zoo. Our teams will then visit the Melbourne Museum to explore for the afternoon. Saturday will be a very busy day for our students. Once they arrive at the finals they will be locked down for 3 hours and need to work as a team with no adult assistance. During this time they need to complete a challenge and create a performance to represent a solution to the problem. After lunch all teams will perform and then they have a special dinner and awards ceremony. The teams fly back to Darwin on Sunday morning. I would particularly like to thank Miss Temira Wallis and Mrs Kathleen Baker Brown for their dedication and support in working with the students and parents in organising the interstate experience. We wish the teachers and students the best on this amazing journey and know that they will learn so many important life skills and represent our school and the Northern Territory in an enthusiastic, responsible and collaborative manner. As part of the Survivor challenge the teams had to send in a photo depicting a tribal tableau with a survivor theme and these are the photos they chose to pose for. Maths/ Engineering Team Raphael Thomas, Ethan Hee, Csila Nemeth, Nadia Qin, Atish Ajayakumar and Justin Crossley, (absent; Patrick Woodcock) Language / Literature Team Tai Hennessey, Oliver Zimmerman, Ruby Surtees, William Brown, Angus Gurry, Ras Thomson, (absent; Lucy Van’t Sand). Year 6 Poetry As part of our English unit this term the students in year 6 are looking at different types of poems, here they have created poems about natural disasters. Please see some of their fantastic work on the next 4 pages. Suffocating, Suspicious, Tsunami New York is in fear, like a child looking under her bed. Families are devastated and praying to survive, water spreads around the city. Families lost their loved ones; families are separated and will be scared for life. The waves crash over buildings and all you can hear is the water dripping off the ceilings, bouncing off walls. As people drown, they hope for air. Nowhere to go nowhere to hide, the anger waits so be unleashed like a tiger not getting fed. No one knew what was coming, they all were just humming. The tsunami separated families apart, lives were lost and bodies were found. Puddles of tears surrounded the ground, city windows were soaked and boats were tipped. The sun was hidden. The people who survived, will never forget the word tsunami. By Jenica Whittles Squealing Pit of Death Fiery furnace, spitting out furious flames and puffs of toxic ash. You cannot run, you cannot hide. All you can do is let the sweltering fire and poisonous ash consume you. Fear and visions of a pain, full death overwhelms its frightened victims. Red raging river full of pain and the souls of its latest victims. By Muchulinnda Crawford Terrifying Turning Tornado The tornado came like an immense vortex. Taking everything like pieces of dust, Ripping shops, homes, cars and buses, Uprooting trees and throwing people. It wiped out everything in its path. People thought of this fright, Would it last all night. The sound was so loud it blocked out, Screams and cries in despair. You can never hide, it will always find you. Once it was gone families and people appeared out of the rubble, Walking onto the roads. They searched for missing, children, babies, mum and dads. Some were alone. This nightmare they'll never forget. By Tyler Norton Twisted Terrifying Tornado Dark times when the sky was grey and there’s nothing to play. But when something is going on outside, so unknown it is best not to say hi. You can hide, but he will find you. For what I am telling you is no story. For this is a curse. Helicopters and ships will roam by and crash down and sink. They think if they push eject that they will be safe they are wrong. No but stuck in a shameful place. By Tyler Norton Now from what you have seen in movies you have seen that is nothing but peace. You are wrong. Now close your eyes and see. That you are in this EVIL thing with no gravity and you are now super terrified. Once you are in this thing there is no escape. If you are in this thing you won’t go to your fantasy. You are on the road to death. After this is all over and it has left its scraps. This curse is called a TORNADO…….. By Charli Jamieson SCHOOL AUTONOMY UPDATE- from Department of Education The move to a global school budget, and the new resourcing model, will improve the targeting of resources, provide schools with greater flexibility in decision making and a clear framework for forward planning. For the first time principals and school councils have visibility and control of staffing and operational costs attributed to the total budget of the school, hence the word ‘global’. No longer will schools be staffed through a staffing allocation model administered and controlled centrally by head office, where every staffing decision needed to be approved centrally. Preliminary budgets were released to principals at the end of Term 3. Principals will now work with their leadership teams and school councils to put in place their school budget and staffing profile for 2015 to meet the needs of their students and the school’s annual operational plan which outlines the educational plan for the school. Importantly, in 2015 every school will receive an increased budget per student. However, if effective enrolment decreases, a school may receive less overall. Of course the opposite applies where student numbers have increased. School funding will progressively transition from current levels to the new student needs-based funding to ensure principals have the necessary time to plan and work in the new environment. Staffing schools under global school budgets A key part of increasing autonomy is giving principals and school councils the ability to determine staffing resources to deliver the best learning outcomes for their students. It is important to note that there is no fundamental change to employment under the school autonomy initiatives. Principals and schools will continue to operate under the Public Sector Employment and Management Act (PSEMA) and the relevant Enterprise Bargaining Agreement, and all permanent staff must remain in place. A new student needs-based funding model The new student needs-based funding model is based on research by Australia’s leading authority on needs-based school resourcing, Professor Stephen Lamb of Victoria University, and takes into consideration the diverse and complex needs of Northern Territory students. Three components make up a global school budget A global school budget is the total budget allocated to a school to provide education services and consists of three components. The largest part of the budget is the student needs-based component, which includes the salaries for teachers and administration staff. This has been calculated using the new student needs-based funding model. Yours Sincerely Ms Yvonne Harding Acting Principal Yvonne.harding@ntschools.nt UNSW ICAS COMPETITION IN SPELLING, ENGLISH AND MATHEMATICS AWARDS At our assembly this Friday 17th October, we will be celebrating the achievements of the students who participated in the UNSW ICAS Spelling, English and Mathematics competitions. At this assembly, students who received an award of Merit or higher will be presented with their certificates. Students who received a Participation award will be recognised at the assembly and their certificates will be given to them by their class teacher. Assembly starts at 9.15 am and we look forward to seeing you there. School netball starts this week. The girls play every Wednesday night from week 2 to week at 9. Parap has three teams, a year 4/5 and year 5 who play at 5pm and a year 6 team who play at 6pm The teams are 4/5, Laleeta Das, Meg Marker, Grace Johns, Bella Rees (Nightcliff), Olivia Browne, Tess Sallows, Lacey Sant and Maddy O’Meara Year 5 Pruella Anderson, Mia Bowen, Tess Jungfer, Zita Varatharajan, Isla Baker, TamiahRae Wilson, Dayia Rossiter, Fatima Issah Bandao and Maddison Samsa Year 6 Taylah, Sally Spain, (Kormilda), Makayla Bullivant, Maddi Busse Camryn Stacey, Cara Doherty, Jordan Race Lexis Rohrlach, and Ashlee Caranough. We have two ex-students joining the teams as their schools don’t have a team for them to continue playing. The games are at Marrara so come along and support your school. The coaches are Sally Hartshorn (yr6), Suzie Marker (Yr4/5) and Janine Bowen and Helen Murray (Yr5) Come and support the Parap Preschool Saturday 18th October, by buying a sausage or two at their Bunnings BBQ. 10 TERM 4 Tutoring Does your child need help with his or her school work during Term 4? Tutoring available in English and Maths from qualified teachers. To make a time to discuss your child’s learning needs contact Michele on 0415 583 665. Reasonable rates for individual and small group sessions. Canteen Special Tuesday 21st – Wednesday 22nd “Mexican Taco Wrap” (Mexican Taco mince, lettuce, tomato and grated cheese, topped with salsa sauce) Or “Nachos” (Corn Chips topped with Taco mince, grated cheese, salsa and garnished with lettuce and tomato) $5.00 Each Volunteers urgently required, please contact Sandra on PH: 8982 2955. 11 12 13 14 15 16
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